Everyone wants a job that pays a lot of money for some people that is the only consideration, these are the top 10 highest paying jobs.
SUBSCRIBE TO MOSTAMAZINGTOP10-
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCBINYCmwE29fBXCpUI8DgTA
CHECK OUT MY MAIN CHANNEL- http://bit.ly/1Q7kPWb
Subscribe To My VlogChannel:
http://bit.ly/1NOjFwE
WANT MORE DUMB TWEETS -
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VIDEOEDITED BY:
Imo Scrimger

published:31 May 2016

views:2013492

A lot of language enthusiasts have been asking me what kind of job or career they can do using foreign languages. It`s a great question! In this video I give you some possible answers, but hopefully the Langfocus viewers will share their knowledge too!
Support Langfocus on Patreon: http://patreon.com/langfocus
Special thanks to: Nicholas Shelokov and 谷雨 穆 for their generous Patreon support.
http://facebook.com/langfocus
http://instagram.com/langfocus
http://twitter.com/langfocus
http://langfocus.com
Music: "Cuban Sandwich" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution3.0
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/b...
"Otis McMusic" by Otis McDonald.

published:20 Mar 2016

views:159256

We did the math on the grunt-to-grat ratio for you, with 10 jobs you wouldn't expect to be well-paying, and the details on what it takes to land the position, in this episode of The Infographics Show, 10 Surprisingly High Paying Jobs. ⭐SUBSCRIBE: http://bit.ly/2glTFyc ⭐
MILITARY PLAYLIST —► http://bit.ly/MilitaryComparisons
WEBSITE (You can suggest a topic):
http://theinfographicsshow.com
SUPPORT US:
Patreon.......► https://www.patreon.com/theinfographicsshow
CHAT:
DISCORD.....►https://discord.gg/sh5JwUw
SOCIAL:
Facebook...► https://facebook.com/TheInfographicsShow
Instagram..►https://www.instagram.com/theinfographicsshow
Twitter........► https://twitter.com/TheInfoShow
Subreddit...► http://reddit.com/r/TheInfographicsShow
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sources for this episode:

China'sHuman Traffic - Japanese authorities are fighting against an increasing number of illegal immigrants from China, which is in turn fuelling the drug trade.
For downloads and more information visit:
http://www.journeyman.tv/?lid=9237
Immigration authorities are struggling to turn back the tide of illegal Chinese immigrants.
In a seedy Tokyo suburb a flat crammed with 6 Chinese immigrants receives a bang on the door at dawn. Immigration police lead the men away to contemplate their return to China without the dreamed-off riches and without the £14,000 payoff for the smugglers that brought them here. Japan is coming to terms with this huge illegal immigration trade that brought it cheap labour but is stirring-up it's own crime wave as the Chinese smuggling gangs, known as Snakeheads, ship in huge amounts of drugs alongside their human cargo. They're deporting the illegals that empty their bins and build their houses. Yet still they arrive as fast as they're being caught. Japan is too tempting a jewel. "I heard many people earned money easily in Japan. That's why I came," explains one immigrant. After 6 years working secretly as a builder he's managed to build a 3-storey house back home. There is simply too much money to be made, too many dirty jobs the Japanese don't want to do, and too few immigration officers to catch them.
Produced by ABC Australia. Ref - 688
Distributed by JourneymanPictures
Journeyman Pictures is your independent source for
the world's most powerful films, exploring the burning issues of today. We represent stories from the world's top producers, with brand new content coming in all the time. On our channel you'll find outstanding and controversial journalism covering any global subject you can imagine wanting to know about.

You won’t believe what sort of things are waiting for you in the Land of the Rising Sun! It is like a whole other world full of unbelievable phenomena and weird traditions.
Subscribe to Bright Side : https://goo.gl/rQTJZz
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Our Social Media:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/brightside/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/brightgram/
5-Minute Crafts Youtube: https://www.goo.gl/8JVmuC
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
For more videos and articles visit:
http://www.brightside.me/

published:03 Sep 2017

views:12058928

Japan is a well-known country for its amazing inventions. Some of them are weird, and others are ingenious. We can’t wait for them to come to other countries as well!
Subscribe to Bright Side : https://goo.gl/rQTJZz
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Our Social Media:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/brightside/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/brightgram/
5-Minute Crafts Youtube: https://www.goo.gl/8JVmuC
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
For more videos and articles visit:
http://www.brightside.me/

published:13 Sep 2017

views:926379

Read this blog if you want to know how much I make from YouTube:
http://engineeredtruth.com/howmuch
Interview with computer information engineer. What network engineers actually do vs what they thought they would be doing. Is management information systems a good career?
Expand for table of contents
00:05 How did you guys become Network Engineer
01:05 What do you guys do?
02:05 Do NetworkEngineers have to be social?
03:10 What are the real job duties?
04:30 Explain your job to a HS student
05:30 Is there varying work load?
07:23 Do you do the same sh*t over & over?
08:00 Is there a lot to learn?
09:40 Can one person know everything?
11:23 School vs Work
13:20 How secure are networks?
14:55 What car do you guys drive?
The #1 internship marketplace exclusively for college students and new grads ➡ http://www.wayup.com/refer/engineeredtruth ⬅
https://Facebook.com/EngineeredTruth
https://Twitter.com/EngineeredTruth
https://www.instagram.com/EngineeredtTruth/
www.EngineeredTruth.com

published:19 Dec 2014

views:170801

Are you searching for how to make money online fast and easy? In this video, I go over 8 active income sources, and 8 ways to make money online using passive income, including my proof and recommendations. From Freelance jobs to automated online courses, earning income online has never been as easy as it is now in the digital age.
Check out my Passive Income Ebook:
http://bit.ly/PracticalIncomeEbook
K Money Mastery - Learn to make passive income with Amazon Kindle ebooks
http://bit.ly/KMoneyMasteryPsychology
VideoBreakthroughAcademy - Learn how to grow your Youtube channel
http://bit.ly/PracticalYoutubeCourse
http://practicalpie.com/how-to-make-money-online-methods/
Blinkist FREE TRIAL to read books faster: http://bit.ly/2cCoWxV

Huáyì (simplified Chinese:华裔; traditional Chinese:華裔; Pe̍h-ōe-jī:Hôa-è) refers to ethnic Chinese residing outside of China. Another often-used term is 海外华人 (Hǎiwài Huárén), a more literal translation of overseas Chinese; it is often used by the PRC government to refer to people of Chinese ethnicities who live outside the PRC, regardless of citizenship.

Job Net Japan

Top 10 Highest Paying Jobs

Everyone wants a job that pays a lot of money for some people that is the only consideration, these are the top 10 highest paying jobs.
SUBSCRIBE TO MOSTAMAZINGTOP10-
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCBINYCmwE29fBXCpUI8DgTA
CHECK OUT MY MAIN CHANNEL- http://bit.ly/1Q7kPWb
Subscribe To My VlogChannel:
http://bit.ly/1NOjFwE
WANT MORE DUMB TWEETS -
http://bit.ly/1qoixa9
NEW MERCHANDISE:
https://shop.spreadshirt.com/LandonProduction?noCache=true
FOLLOW US ON SOCIAL MEDIA
INSTAGRAM-
https://www.instagram.com/missrebeccaj/
TWITTER-
https://twitter.com/rebeccafelgate
VIDEOEDITED BY:
Imo Scrimger

7:27

What Job Can I do With Foreign Language Skills?

What Job Can I do With Foreign Language Skills?

What Job Can I do With Foreign Language Skills?

A lot of language enthusiasts have been asking me what kind of job or career they can do using foreign languages. It`s a great question! In this video I give you some possible answers, but hopefully the Langfocus viewers will share their knowledge too!
Support Langfocus on Patreon: http://patreon.com/langfocus
Special thanks to: Nicholas Shelokov and 谷雨 穆 for their generous Patreon support.
http://facebook.com/langfocus
http://instagram.com/langfocus
http://twitter.com/langfocus
http://langfocus.com
Music: "Cuban Sandwich" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution3.0
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/b...
"Otis McMusic" by Otis McDonald.

7:51

10 Surprisingly High Paying Jobs

10 Surprisingly High Paying Jobs

10 Surprisingly High Paying Jobs

We did the math on the grunt-to-grat ratio for you, with 10 jobs you wouldn't expect to be well-paying, and the details on what it takes to land the position, in this episode of The Infographics Show, 10 Surprisingly High Paying Jobs. ⭐SUBSCRIBE: http://bit.ly/2glTFyc ⭐
MILITARY PLAYLIST —► http://bit.ly/MilitaryComparisons
WEBSITE (You can suggest a topic):
http://theinfographicsshow.com
SUPPORT US:
Patreon.......► https://www.patreon.com/theinfographicsshow
CHAT:
DISCORD.....►https://discord.gg/sh5JwUw
SOCIAL:
Facebook...► https://facebook.com/TheInfographicsShow
Instagram..►https://www.instagram.com/theinfographicsshow
Twitter........► https://twitter.com/TheInfoShow
Subreddit...► http://reddit.com/r/TheInfographicsShow
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sources for this episode:

Japan's battle with rising tide of illegal Chinese immigrants

China'sHuman Traffic - Japanese authorities are fighting against an increasing number of illegal immigrants from China, which is in turn fuelling the drug trade.
For downloads and more information visit:
http://www.journeyman.tv/?lid=9237
Immigration authorities are struggling to turn back the tide of illegal Chinese immigrants.
In a seedy Tokyo suburb a flat crammed with 6 Chinese immigrants receives a bang on the door at dawn. Immigration police lead the men away to contemplate their return to China without the dreamed-off riches and without the £14,000 payoff for the smugglers that brought them here. Japan is coming to terms with this huge illegal immigration trade that brought it cheap labour but is stirring-up it's own crime wave as the Chinese smuggling gangs, known as Snakeheads, ship in huge amounts of drugs alongside their human cargo. They're deporting the illegals that empty their bins and build their houses. Yet still they arrive as fast as they're being caught. Japan is too tempting a jewel. "I heard many people earned money easily in Japan. That's why I came," explains one immigrant. After 6 years working secretly as a builder he's managed to build a 3-storey house back home. There is simply too much money to be made, too many dirty jobs the Japanese don't want to do, and too few immigration officers to catch them.
Produced by ABC Australia. Ref - 688
Distributed by JourneymanPictures
Journeyman Pictures is your independent source for
the world's most powerful films, exploring the burning issues of today. We represent stories from the world's top producers, with brand new content coming in all the time. On our channel you'll find outstanding and controversial journalism covering any global subject you can imagine wanting to know about.

17 Crazy Things That Are Only Possible in Japan

You won’t believe what sort of things are waiting for you in the Land of the Rising Sun! It is like a whole other world full of unbelievable phenomena and weird traditions.
Subscribe to Bright Side : https://goo.gl/rQTJZz
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Our Social Media:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/brightside/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/brightgram/
5-Minute Crafts Youtube: https://www.goo.gl/8JVmuC
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
For more videos and articles visit:
http://www.brightside.me/

9:15

18 Weird Things That Only Exist in Japan

18 Weird Things That Only Exist in Japan

18 Weird Things That Only Exist in Japan

Japan is a well-known country for its amazing inventions. Some of them are weird, and others are ingenious. We can’t wait for them to come to other countries as well!
Subscribe to Bright Side : https://goo.gl/rQTJZz
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Our Social Media:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/brightside/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/brightgram/
5-Minute Crafts Youtube: https://www.goo.gl/8JVmuC
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
For more videos and articles visit:
http://www.brightside.me/

15:59

Network Engineer: Expectations vs Reality

Network Engineer: Expectations vs Reality

Network Engineer: Expectations vs Reality

Read this blog if you want to know how much I make from YouTube:
http://engineeredtruth.com/howmuch
Interview with computer information engineer. What network engineers actually do vs what they thought they would be doing. Is management information systems a good career?
Expand for table of contents
00:05 How did you guys become Network Engineer
01:05 What do you guys do?
02:05 Do NetworkEngineers have to be social?
03:10 What are the real job duties?
04:30 Explain your job to a HS student
05:30 Is there varying work load?
07:23 Do you do the same sh*t over & over?
08:00 Is there a lot to learn?
09:40 Can one person know everything?
11:23 School vs Work
13:20 How secure are networks?
14:55 What car do you guys drive?
The #1 internship marketplace exclusively for college students and new grads ➡ http://www.wayup.com/refer/engineeredtruth ⬅
https://Facebook.com/EngineeredTruth
https://Twitter.com/EngineeredTruth
https://www.instagram.com/EngineeredtTruth/
www.EngineeredTruth.com

17:18

How to Make Money Online - 16 Methods to earn Passive Income and get paid from home

How to Make Money Online - 16 Methods to earn Passive Income and get paid from home

How to Make Money Online - 16 Methods to earn Passive Income and get paid from home

Are you searching for how to make money online fast and easy? In this video, I go over 8 active income sources, and 8 ways to make money online using passive income, including my proof and recommendations. From Freelance jobs to automated online courses, earning income online has never been as easy as it is now in the digital age.
Check out my Passive Income Ebook:
http://bit.ly/PracticalIncomeEbook
K Money Mastery - Learn to make passive income with Amazon Kindle ebooks
http://bit.ly/KMoneyMasteryPsychology
VideoBreakthroughAcademy - Learn how to grow your Youtube channel
http://bit.ly/PracticalYoutubeCourse
http://practicalpie.com/how-to-make-money-online-methods/
Blinkist FREE TRIAL to read books faster: http://bit.ly/2cCoWxV

14:48

Inside the Japanese Hotel Staffed by Robots

Inside the Japanese Hotel Staffed by Robots

Inside the Japanese Hotel Staffed by Robots

If there’s one place on Earth you can already get a glimpse of our robot-assisted future, it’s Japan. Routinely at the forefront of robotics research, the country has brought us some of the weirdest automatons, most lifelike androids, and cutest helper-bots.
Nowhere is this more evident than at Nagasaki’s Henn-na Hotel, a hotel run by robots that opened this year. Walk into reception and a mechanised dinosaur will guide you through check-in; go to your room and a luggage bot will wheel your suitcase along beside you; get ready for bed and your own robot companion will turn out the lights.
Henn-na Hotel CEOHideo Sawada sells his offering as part of a utopian vision where robots take over manual labour so humans can turn their attention to more creative pursuits. Replacing staff with robots might reduce labour costs, but their appeal to visitors needs to last beyond novelty value.
Motherboard host Ben Ferguson checks into the robot hotel in the first episode of our new travel series Voyager, made possible by travel tool KAYAK (http://www.kayak.co.uk/). The robot workers he meets are courteous and communicative, but can they emulate the human warmth of their flesh-and-blood counterparts? Could robots really be our future holiday companions, or do man and machine ultimately get lost in translation?
WATCH NEXT: The USMilitary's Robot WorldChampionship - http://bit.ly/1PGsLNt
Subscribe to MOTHERBOARD: http://bit.ly/Subscribe-To-MOTHERBOARD
Follow MOTHERBOARD
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More videos from the VICE network: https://www.fb.com/vicevideos

7:30

McKinsey Careers: Life as a business analyst

McKinsey Careers: Life as a business analyst

McKinsey Careers: Life as a business analyst

Some of our BAs share the inside scoop of what it's like to be an analyst in NA with you.

Job Net Japan

Top 10 Highest Paying Jobs

Everyone wants a job that pays a lot of money for some people that is the only consideration, these are the top 10 highest paying jobs.
SUBSCRIBE TO MOSTAMAZINGTOP10-
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCBINYCmwE29fBXCpUI8DgTA
CHECK OUT MY MAIN CHANNEL- http://bit.ly/1Q7kPWb
Subscribe To My VlogChannel:
http://bit.ly/1NOjFwE
WANT MORE DUMB TWEETS -
http://bit.ly/1qoixa9
NEW MERCHANDISE:
https://shop.spreadshirt.com/LandonProduction?noCache=true
FOLLOW US ON SOCIAL MEDIA
INSTAGRAM-
https://www.instagram.com/missrebeccaj/
TWITTER-
https://twitter.com/rebeccafelgate
VIDEOEDITED BY:
Imo Scrimger

published: 31 May 2016

What Job Can I do With Foreign Language Skills?

A lot of language enthusiasts have been asking me what kind of job or career they can do using foreign languages. It`s a great question! In this video I give you some possible answers, but hopefully the Langfocus viewers will share their knowledge too!
Support Langfocus on Patreon: http://patreon.com/langfocus
Special thanks to: Nicholas Shelokov and 谷雨 穆 for their generous Patreon support.
http://facebook.com/langfocus
http://instagram.com/langfocus
http://twitter.com/langfocus
http://langfocus.com
Music: "Cuban Sandwich" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution3.0
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/b...
"Otis McMusic" by Otis McDonald.

published: 20 Mar 2016

10 Surprisingly High Paying Jobs

We did the math on the grunt-to-grat ratio for you, with 10 jobs you wouldn't expect to be well-paying, and the details on what it takes to land the position, in this episode of The Infographics Show, 10 Surprisingly High Paying Jobs. ⭐SUBSCRIBE: http://bit.ly/2glTFyc ⭐
MILITARY PLAYLIST —► http://bit.ly/MilitaryComparisons
WEBSITE (You can suggest a topic):
http://theinfographicsshow.com
SUPPORT US:
Patreon.......► https://www.patreon.com/theinfographicsshow
CHAT:
DISCORD.....►https://discord.gg/sh5JwUw
SOCIAL:
Facebook...► https://facebook.com/TheInfographicsShow
Instagram..►https://www.instagram.com/theinfographicsshow
Twitter........► https://twitter.com/TheInfoShow
Subreddit...► http://reddit.com/r/TheInfographicsShow
----------------------------------------------------------...

Japan's battle with rising tide of illegal Chinese immigrants

China'sHuman Traffic - Japanese authorities are fighting against an increasing number of illegal immigrants from China, which is in turn fuelling the drug trade.
For downloads and more information visit:
http://www.journeyman.tv/?lid=9237
Immigration authorities are struggling to turn back the tide of illegal Chinese immigrants.
In a seedy Tokyo suburb a flat crammed with 6 Chinese immigrants receives a bang on the door at dawn. Immigration police lead the men away to contemplate their return to China without the dreamed-off riches and without the £14,000 payoff for the smugglers that brought them here. Japan is coming to terms with this huge illegal immigration trade that brought it cheap labour but is stirring-up it's own crime wave as the Chinese smuggling gangs, known as Snakehead...

17 Crazy Things That Are Only Possible in Japan

You won’t believe what sort of things are waiting for you in the Land of the Rising Sun! It is like a whole other world full of unbelievable phenomena and weird traditions.
Subscribe to Bright Side : https://goo.gl/rQTJZz
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Our Social Media:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/brightside/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/brightgram/
5-Minute Crafts Youtube: https://www.goo.gl/8JVmuC
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
For more videos and articles visit:
http://www.brightside.me/

published: 03 Sep 2017

18 Weird Things That Only Exist in Japan

Japan is a well-known country for its amazing inventions. Some of them are weird, and others are ingenious. We can’t wait for them to come to other countries as well!
Subscribe to Bright Side : https://goo.gl/rQTJZz
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Our Social Media:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/brightside/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/brightgram/
5-Minute Crafts Youtube: https://www.goo.gl/8JVmuC
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
For more videos and articles visit:
http://www.brightside.me/

published: 13 Sep 2017

Network Engineer: Expectations vs Reality

Read this blog if you want to know how much I make from YouTube:
http://engineeredtruth.com/howmuch
Interview with computer information engineer. What network engineers actually do vs what they thought they would be doing. Is management information systems a good career?
Expand for table of contents
00:05 How did you guys become Network Engineer
01:05 What do you guys do?
02:05 Do NetworkEngineers have to be social?
03:10 What are the real job duties?
04:30 Explain your job to a HS student
05:30 Is there varying work load?
07:23 Do you do the same sh*t over & over?
08:00 Is there a lot to learn?
09:40 Can one person know everything?
11:23 School vs Work
13:20 How secure are networks?
14:55 What car do you guys drive?
The #1 internship marketplace exclusively for college students and ne...

published: 19 Dec 2014

How to Make Money Online - 16 Methods to earn Passive Income and get paid from home

Are you searching for how to make money online fast and easy? In this video, I go over 8 active income sources, and 8 ways to make money online using passive income, including my proof and recommendations. From Freelance jobs to automated online courses, earning income online has never been as easy as it is now in the digital age.
Check out my Passive Income Ebook:
http://bit.ly/PracticalIncomeEbook
K Money Mastery - Learn to make passive income with Amazon Kindle ebooks
http://bit.ly/KMoneyMasteryPsychology
VideoBreakthroughAcademy - Learn how to grow your Youtube channel
http://bit.ly/PracticalYoutubeCourse
http://practicalpie.com/how-to-make-money-online-methods/
Blinkist FREE TRIAL to read books faster: http://bit.ly/2cCoWxV

published: 06 Jul 2017

Inside the Japanese Hotel Staffed by Robots

If there’s one place on Earth you can already get a glimpse of our robot-assisted future, it’s Japan. Routinely at the forefront of robotics research, the country has brought us some of the weirdest automatons, most lifelike androids, and cutest helper-bots.
Nowhere is this more evident than at Nagasaki’s Henn-na Hotel, a hotel run by robots that opened this year. Walk into reception and a mechanised dinosaur will guide you through check-in; go to your room and a luggage bot will wheel your suitcase along beside you; get ready for bed and your own robot companion will turn out the lights.
Henn-na Hotel CEOHideo Sawada sells his offering as part of a utopian vision where robots take over manual labour so humans can turn their attention to more creative pursuits. Replacing staff with robo...

published: 23 Oct 2015

McKinsey Careers: Life as a business analyst

Some of our BAs share the inside scoop of what it's like to be an analyst in NA with you.

Top 10 Highest Paying Jobs

Everyone wants a job that pays a lot of money for some people that is the only consideration, these are the top 10 highest paying jobs.
SUBSCRIBE TO MOSTAMAZI...

Everyone wants a job that pays a lot of money for some people that is the only consideration, these are the top 10 highest paying jobs.
SUBSCRIBE TO MOSTAMAZINGTOP10-
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCBINYCmwE29fBXCpUI8DgTA
CHECK OUT MY MAIN CHANNEL- http://bit.ly/1Q7kPWb
Subscribe To My VlogChannel:
http://bit.ly/1NOjFwE
WANT MORE DUMB TWEETS -
http://bit.ly/1qoixa9
NEW MERCHANDISE:
https://shop.spreadshirt.com/LandonProduction?noCache=true
FOLLOW US ON SOCIAL MEDIA
INSTAGRAM-
https://www.instagram.com/missrebeccaj/
TWITTER-
https://twitter.com/rebeccafelgate
VIDEOEDITED BY:
Imo Scrimger

Everyone wants a job that pays a lot of money for some people that is the only consideration, these are the top 10 highest paying jobs.
SUBSCRIBE TO MOSTAMAZINGTOP10-
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCBINYCmwE29fBXCpUI8DgTA
CHECK OUT MY MAIN CHANNEL- http://bit.ly/1Q7kPWb
Subscribe To My VlogChannel:
http://bit.ly/1NOjFwE
WANT MORE DUMB TWEETS -
http://bit.ly/1qoixa9
NEW MERCHANDISE:
https://shop.spreadshirt.com/LandonProduction?noCache=true
FOLLOW US ON SOCIAL MEDIA
INSTAGRAM-
https://www.instagram.com/missrebeccaj/
TWITTER-
https://twitter.com/rebeccafelgate
VIDEOEDITED BY:
Imo Scrimger

What Job Can I do With Foreign Language Skills?

A lot of language enthusiasts have been asking me what kind of job or career they can do using foreign languages. It`s a great question! In this video I give yo...

A lot of language enthusiasts have been asking me what kind of job or career they can do using foreign languages. It`s a great question! In this video I give you some possible answers, but hopefully the Langfocus viewers will share their knowledge too!
Support Langfocus on Patreon: http://patreon.com/langfocus
Special thanks to: Nicholas Shelokov and 谷雨 穆 for their generous Patreon support.
http://facebook.com/langfocus
http://instagram.com/langfocus
http://twitter.com/langfocus
http://langfocus.com
Music: "Cuban Sandwich" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution3.0
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/b...
"Otis McMusic" by Otis McDonald.

A lot of language enthusiasts have been asking me what kind of job or career they can do using foreign languages. It`s a great question! In this video I give you some possible answers, but hopefully the Langfocus viewers will share their knowledge too!
Support Langfocus on Patreon: http://patreon.com/langfocus
Special thanks to: Nicholas Shelokov and 谷雨 穆 for their generous Patreon support.
http://facebook.com/langfocus
http://instagram.com/langfocus
http://twitter.com/langfocus
http://langfocus.com
Music: "Cuban Sandwich" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution3.0
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/b...
"Otis McMusic" by Otis McDonald.

10 Surprisingly High Paying Jobs

We did the math on the grunt-to-grat ratio for you, with 10 jobs you wouldn't expect to be well-paying, and the details on what it takes to land the position, i...

We did the math on the grunt-to-grat ratio for you, with 10 jobs you wouldn't expect to be well-paying, and the details on what it takes to land the position, in this episode of The Infographics Show, 10 Surprisingly High Paying Jobs. ⭐SUBSCRIBE: http://bit.ly/2glTFyc ⭐
MILITARY PLAYLIST —► http://bit.ly/MilitaryComparisons
WEBSITE (You can suggest a topic):
http://theinfographicsshow.com
SUPPORT US:
Patreon.......► https://www.patreon.com/theinfographicsshow
CHAT:
DISCORD.....►https://discord.gg/sh5JwUw
SOCIAL:
Facebook...► https://facebook.com/TheInfographicsShow
Instagram..►https://www.instagram.com/theinfographicsshow
Twitter........► https://twitter.com/TheInfoShow
Subreddit...► http://reddit.com/r/TheInfographicsShow
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sources for this episode:

We did the math on the grunt-to-grat ratio for you, with 10 jobs you wouldn't expect to be well-paying, and the details on what it takes to land the position, in this episode of The Infographics Show, 10 Surprisingly High Paying Jobs. ⭐SUBSCRIBE: http://bit.ly/2glTFyc ⭐
MILITARY PLAYLIST —► http://bit.ly/MilitaryComparisons
WEBSITE (You can suggest a topic):
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China'sHuman Traffic - Japanese authorities are fighting against an increasing number of illegal immigrants from China, which is in turn fuelling the drug trade.
For downloads and more information visit:
http://www.journeyman.tv/?lid=9237
Immigration authorities are struggling to turn back the tide of illegal Chinese immigrants.
In a seedy Tokyo suburb a flat crammed with 6 Chinese immigrants receives a bang on the door at dawn. Immigration police lead the men away to contemplate their return to China without the dreamed-off riches and without the £14,000 payoff for the smugglers that brought them here. Japan is coming to terms with this huge illegal immigration trade that brought it cheap labour but is stirring-up it's own crime wave as the Chinese smuggling gangs, known as Snakeheads, ship in huge amounts of drugs alongside their human cargo. They're deporting the illegals that empty their bins and build their houses. Yet still they arrive as fast as they're being caught. Japan is too tempting a jewel. "I heard many people earned money easily in Japan. That's why I came," explains one immigrant. After 6 years working secretly as a builder he's managed to build a 3-storey house back home. There is simply too much money to be made, too many dirty jobs the Japanese don't want to do, and too few immigration officers to catch them.
Produced by ABC Australia. Ref - 688
Distributed by JourneymanPictures
Journeyman Pictures is your independent source for
the world's most powerful films, exploring the burning issues of today. We represent stories from the world's top producers, with brand new content coming in all the time. On our channel you'll find outstanding and controversial journalism covering any global subject you can imagine wanting to know about.

China'sHuman Traffic - Japanese authorities are fighting against an increasing number of illegal immigrants from China, which is in turn fuelling the drug trade.
For downloads and more information visit:
http://www.journeyman.tv/?lid=9237
Immigration authorities are struggling to turn back the tide of illegal Chinese immigrants.
In a seedy Tokyo suburb a flat crammed with 6 Chinese immigrants receives a bang on the door at dawn. Immigration police lead the men away to contemplate their return to China without the dreamed-off riches and without the £14,000 payoff for the smugglers that brought them here. Japan is coming to terms with this huge illegal immigration trade that brought it cheap labour but is stirring-up it's own crime wave as the Chinese smuggling gangs, known as Snakeheads, ship in huge amounts of drugs alongside their human cargo. They're deporting the illegals that empty their bins and build their houses. Yet still they arrive as fast as they're being caught. Japan is too tempting a jewel. "I heard many people earned money easily in Japan. That's why I came," explains one immigrant. After 6 years working secretly as a builder he's managed to build a 3-storey house back home. There is simply too much money to be made, too many dirty jobs the Japanese don't want to do, and too few immigration officers to catch them.
Produced by ABC Australia. Ref - 688
Distributed by JourneymanPictures
Journeyman Pictures is your independent source for
the world's most powerful films, exploring the burning issues of today. We represent stories from the world's top producers, with brand new content coming in all the time. On our channel you'll find outstanding and controversial journalism covering any global subject you can imagine wanting to know about.

17 Crazy Things That Are Only Possible in Japan

You won’t believe what sort of things are waiting for you in the Land of the Rising Sun! It is like a whole other world full of unbelievable phenomena and weird...

You won’t believe what sort of things are waiting for you in the Land of the Rising Sun! It is like a whole other world full of unbelievable phenomena and weird traditions.
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You won’t believe what sort of things are waiting for you in the Land of the Rising Sun! It is like a whole other world full of unbelievable phenomena and weird traditions.
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18 Weird Things That Only Exist in Japan

Japan is a well-known country for its amazing inventions. Some of them are weird, and others are ingenious. We can’t wait for them to come to other countries as...

Japan is a well-known country for its amazing inventions. Some of them are weird, and others are ingenious. We can’t wait for them to come to other countries as well!
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Japan is a well-known country for its amazing inventions. Some of them are weird, and others are ingenious. We can’t wait for them to come to other countries as well!
Subscribe to Bright Side : https://goo.gl/rQTJZz
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Our Social Media:
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Network Engineer: Expectations vs Reality

Read this blog if you want to know how much I make from YouTube:
http://engineeredtruth.com/howmuch
Interview with computer information engineer. What network ...

Read this blog if you want to know how much I make from YouTube:
http://engineeredtruth.com/howmuch
Interview with computer information engineer. What network engineers actually do vs what they thought they would be doing. Is management information systems a good career?
Expand for table of contents
00:05 How did you guys become Network Engineer
01:05 What do you guys do?
02:05 Do NetworkEngineers have to be social?
03:10 What are the real job duties?
04:30 Explain your job to a HS student
05:30 Is there varying work load?
07:23 Do you do the same sh*t over & over?
08:00 Is there a lot to learn?
09:40 Can one person know everything?
11:23 School vs Work
13:20 How secure are networks?
14:55 What car do you guys drive?
The #1 internship marketplace exclusively for college students and new grads ➡ http://www.wayup.com/refer/engineeredtruth ⬅
https://Facebook.com/EngineeredTruth
https://Twitter.com/EngineeredTruth
https://www.instagram.com/EngineeredtTruth/
www.EngineeredTruth.com

Read this blog if you want to know how much I make from YouTube:
http://engineeredtruth.com/howmuch
Interview with computer information engineer. What network engineers actually do vs what they thought they would be doing. Is management information systems a good career?
Expand for table of contents
00:05 How did you guys become Network Engineer
01:05 What do you guys do?
02:05 Do NetworkEngineers have to be social?
03:10 What are the real job duties?
04:30 Explain your job to a HS student
05:30 Is there varying work load?
07:23 Do you do the same sh*t over & over?
08:00 Is there a lot to learn?
09:40 Can one person know everything?
11:23 School vs Work
13:20 How secure are networks?
14:55 What car do you guys drive?
The #1 internship marketplace exclusively for college students and new grads ➡ http://www.wayup.com/refer/engineeredtruth ⬅
https://Facebook.com/EngineeredTruth
https://Twitter.com/EngineeredTruth
https://www.instagram.com/EngineeredtTruth/
www.EngineeredTruth.com

published:19 Dec 2014

views:170801

back

How to Make Money Online - 16 Methods to earn Passive Income and get paid from home

Are you searching for how to make money online fast and easy? In this video, I go over 8 active income sources, and 8 ways to make money online using passive in...

Are you searching for how to make money online fast and easy? In this video, I go over 8 active income sources, and 8 ways to make money online using passive income, including my proof and recommendations. From Freelance jobs to automated online courses, earning income online has never been as easy as it is now in the digital age.
Check out my Passive Income Ebook:
http://bit.ly/PracticalIncomeEbook
K Money Mastery - Learn to make passive income with Amazon Kindle ebooks
http://bit.ly/KMoneyMasteryPsychology
VideoBreakthroughAcademy - Learn how to grow your Youtube channel
http://bit.ly/PracticalYoutubeCourse
http://practicalpie.com/how-to-make-money-online-methods/
Blinkist FREE TRIAL to read books faster: http://bit.ly/2cCoWxV

Are you searching for how to make money online fast and easy? In this video, I go over 8 active income sources, and 8 ways to make money online using passive income, including my proof and recommendations. From Freelance jobs to automated online courses, earning income online has never been as easy as it is now in the digital age.
Check out my Passive Income Ebook:
http://bit.ly/PracticalIncomeEbook
K Money Mastery - Learn to make passive income with Amazon Kindle ebooks
http://bit.ly/KMoneyMasteryPsychology
VideoBreakthroughAcademy - Learn how to grow your Youtube channel
http://bit.ly/PracticalYoutubeCourse
http://practicalpie.com/how-to-make-money-online-methods/
Blinkist FREE TRIAL to read books faster: http://bit.ly/2cCoWxV

Inside the Japanese Hotel Staffed by Robots

If there’s one place on Earth you can already get a glimpse of our robot-assisted future, it’s Japan. Routinely at the forefront of robotics research, the count...

If there’s one place on Earth you can already get a glimpse of our robot-assisted future, it’s Japan. Routinely at the forefront of robotics research, the country has brought us some of the weirdest automatons, most lifelike androids, and cutest helper-bots.
Nowhere is this more evident than at Nagasaki’s Henn-na Hotel, a hotel run by robots that opened this year. Walk into reception and a mechanised dinosaur will guide you through check-in; go to your room and a luggage bot will wheel your suitcase along beside you; get ready for bed and your own robot companion will turn out the lights.
Henn-na Hotel CEOHideo Sawada sells his offering as part of a utopian vision where robots take over manual labour so humans can turn their attention to more creative pursuits. Replacing staff with robots might reduce labour costs, but their appeal to visitors needs to last beyond novelty value.
Motherboard host Ben Ferguson checks into the robot hotel in the first episode of our new travel series Voyager, made possible by travel tool KAYAK (http://www.kayak.co.uk/). The robot workers he meets are courteous and communicative, but can they emulate the human warmth of their flesh-and-blood counterparts? Could robots really be our future holiday companions, or do man and machine ultimately get lost in translation?
WATCH NEXT: The USMilitary's Robot WorldChampionship - http://bit.ly/1PGsLNt
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If there’s one place on Earth you can already get a glimpse of our robot-assisted future, it’s Japan. Routinely at the forefront of robotics research, the country has brought us some of the weirdest automatons, most lifelike androids, and cutest helper-bots.
Nowhere is this more evident than at Nagasaki’s Henn-na Hotel, a hotel run by robots that opened this year. Walk into reception and a mechanised dinosaur will guide you through check-in; go to your room and a luggage bot will wheel your suitcase along beside you; get ready for bed and your own robot companion will turn out the lights.
Henn-na Hotel CEOHideo Sawada sells his offering as part of a utopian vision where robots take over manual labour so humans can turn their attention to more creative pursuits. Replacing staff with robots might reduce labour costs, but their appeal to visitors needs to last beyond novelty value.
Motherboard host Ben Ferguson checks into the robot hotel in the first episode of our new travel series Voyager, made possible by travel tool KAYAK (http://www.kayak.co.uk/). The robot workers he meets are courteous and communicative, but can they emulate the human warmth of their flesh-and-blood counterparts? Could robots really be our future holiday companions, or do man and machine ultimately get lost in translation?
WATCH NEXT: The USMilitary's Robot WorldChampionship - http://bit.ly/1PGsLNt
Subscribe to MOTHERBOARD: http://bit.ly/Subscribe-To-MOTHERBOARD
Follow MOTHERBOARD
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Japan: The Ultimate Travel Guide by TourRadar 2/5

Japan: The UltimateTravelGuide by TourRadar gives you all the info you need to explore the land of the rising sun. Learn some basics about the country, including what you have to do & see once you arrive, when it's best to travel and which food & drinks you definitely need to enjoy throughout your journey.
-----------------------------------------------
Japan remains one of the most intensely fascinating places in the world, effortlessly intertwining modernity and tradition. Seek serenity in Kyoto by visiting one of thousands of temples spread throughout this former capital, or go skiing in Niseko or summit Mt. Fuji. Of course you can also kick back in one of the country’s many hot springs, where the rich mountain minerals will leave your skin feeling brand new. Once you’ve achieved maxi...

Japan Travel Guide | BEST TIPS

Are you interested in traveling to Japan? YES. Japan is really tourist-friendly so I'm certain you'll have a great time and I hope my travel tips come in handy :) Let me know what you thought of it in the comment section below!
Getting Married in Japan | Waifu Laifu: https://youtu.be/dk4phmbrhH8
FREE 30 Day PremiumTrial of Crunchyroll: www.crunchyroll.com/reinascully
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Thank You for Watching!
——————————————
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*edited by: @fluskenraider

25 Things To Do in Tokyo, Japan (Watch This Before You Go)

Get info about things to do, where to stay, and the best food to eat on your visit to Tokyo, Japan. Here's the guide: https://migrationology.com/tokyo-travel-guide-for-food-lovers/
Tokyo (東京), Japan, is one of the world's greatest cities, and there's so much to do and see when you visit. From temples and shrines, to gardens and museums, you'll never run out of attractions. Out of all the things you could do, I've chosen a top 25 list for this awesome city (and just so you know food is my first choice in Tokyo)!
1. Ameya-Yokochō (アメヤ横丁) - A giant open air market that offers clothes, cosmetics, food, and restaurants and bars.
2. Meiji Shrine (明治神宮) - This Shinto shrine, surrounded by beautiful forest, is extremely significant.
3. Ryogoku Kokugikan (両国国技館) - Even if it's not fight season, y...

published: 30 Mar 2014

Travel Tips for Japan You Must Know!

We've traveled to Japan a lot as visitors, and now that we live here, we've brought in a lot of visitors as well. Here are the top travel tips for Japan that we've learned over the years, so hopefully your trip here will go a lot more smoothly!
If that's not enough, we wrote a few more tips on our blog
☞ http://www.eatyourkimchi.com/travel-tips-for-japan-you-must-know
Please ask in the comments if there's anything else you want to know about traveling to Japan
Subscribe for more videos:
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Bloopers & Extra footage from this video:
☞ https://youtu.be/8J0BnzA75Y8

published: 05 Mar 2018

Best Things to Do in Tokyo, Japan - Tokyo Metro Guide

Want more info about Tokyo transportation and Metro? Click here: http://www.tokyosubwayticket.com/ph/
AIRBNB Promo Code Here: http://www.airbnb.com/c/eheussaff
This is a great video for people looking for recommendations on what to do in Tokyo. From great restaurants to museums, we tried to pack as much information as we could. This is the type of information I wish I had before my first trip to this huge city.
This was a long time coming. Ever since we started doing travel shows, I knew I wanted to cover Tokyo. We just never got the opportunity to and it always seemed like a gargantuan task. We were lucky enough to link up with Tokyo Metro to allow us to create this video. I hope you guys enjoy it and share it with your friends if you did!
http://www.tokyometro.jp/en/ticket/value/1day...

published: 04 Dec 2017

Tokyo Vacation Travel Guide | Expedia

https://www.expedia.com/Tokyo.d179900.Destination-Travel-Guides
Welcome to Tokyo, the capital of Japan and the epitome of the word “megacity.”
In this vast metropolis, ancient traditions blend with futuristic buildings, and your Tokyo sightseeing will take you to representations of each. Pay your respects at temples set in forested hillsides, then flex your credit card in one of the shopping districts, before sitting down to a five-star meal…all in one day.
Your Tokyo tour begins with the subway and train system, which will take you all over this sprawling city. Tokyo is home to some 35 million people, many of which you’ll meet as its public transit carries you throughout its many neighborhoods. Make a stop in Asakusa, a temple district nestled in leafy trees with skyscrapers towering i...

published: 02 Oct 2014

JAPAN: Tokyo, Harajuku, Shibuya, Fuji & Hakkone | Food + Travel Guide

More videos for you to (hopefully) enjoy here:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1GLHys1MXNg
-~-~~-~~~-~~-~-
Join me on my 5 day travel across Japan! We'll gaze at Mount Fuji, soak in onsens, have sashimi boats, scream from world record holdin' rollercoasters and lose ourselves watching the scramble of the Shibuya crossing.
Interested in more travel videos?
A week in Hong Kong: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o4H3oAdV3Ew
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I love Instagram:
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I also blog:
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...and talk about food!
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Music used with permission by the following a...

Kyoto Vacation Travel Guide | Expedia

Kyoto, Japan, has long been considered one of the country’s most beautiful cities. Once the capital of the nation, Kyoto is now an ultra-modern haven that retains a great deal of its ancient charm.
To see some of this long-established glamour, make your way to Kyoto Tower. Just two miles east of the tower is Gion, an entertainment quarter and home to many of Kyoto’s famous geishas. As you walk east through Gion, you’ll find even more old architecture, including several Ryokan, or traditional Japanese inns. Many date back to the Edo period, which ranged from 1603 to 1868.
During your Kyoto tour, take a rickshaw ride to the Sannen-zaka and Ninen-zaka districts, where cars are prohibited and traditional teahouses and temples adorn the nearby landscape. Kyoto is known as “The City of Ten Th...

published: 30 Jan 2015

Japan Travel Guide 2016 (HD 1080p)

JapanTravelGuide 2016 - Top things to do in Japan 2016 - Japan trip 2016 - Japan tourism & vacations - Tourist attractions in Japan
Travel Videos HD, World Travel Guide http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=World1Tube
Japan, known as Nihon or Nippon (日本) in Japanese, is a nation of islands in East Asia.
See in Japan
===============
Castles
-------------
When most Westerners think of castles, they naturally think of their own in places like England and France. However, Japan too was a nation of castle-builders. In its feudal days, you could find multiple castles in nearly every prefecture.
Original Castles
Because of bombings in WWII, fires, edicts to tear down castles, etc. only twelve of Japan's castles are considered to be originals, which have donjons that date bac...

published: 14 Feb 2016

JAPAN TRAVEL GUIDE HD

Incredible video of Japan with information about the main cities, best places and prices.
THANKS FOR WATCHING!!! If you like the content and support the channel, you can give a donation at this link https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_s-xclick&hosted_button_id=4QFST95LX57YJ
PLEASE SHARE, LIKE OR SUBSCRIBE FOR SUPPORT THE CHANNEL.
In this small travel guide of Japan you can see: Tokyo, Kamakura, Nagoya, Kiso valley, Kyoto, Osaka, Nara, Hiroshima and Miyajima
Please share this video if it's useful to your friend or the person you know!!!
You can get more information in http://www.japan-guide.com/ or http://us.jnto.go.jp/top/index.phpEnjoy your Japan trip !!! TRAVEL FOR BEGINNERS
Increible vídeo de Japón con información de las ciudades principales, mejores sitios y precios.
En est...

Japan: The Ultimate Travel Guide by TourRadar 2/5

Japan: The UltimateTravelGuide by TourRadar gives you all the info you need to explore the land of the rising sun. Learn some basics about the country, includ...

Japan: The UltimateTravelGuide by TourRadar gives you all the info you need to explore the land of the rising sun. Learn some basics about the country, including what you have to do & see once you arrive, when it's best to travel and which food & drinks you definitely need to enjoy throughout your journey.
-----------------------------------------------
Japan remains one of the most intensely fascinating places in the world, effortlessly intertwining modernity and tradition. Seek serenity in Kyoto by visiting one of thousands of temples spread throughout this former capital, or go skiing in Niseko or summit Mt. Fuji. Of course you can also kick back in one of the country’s many hot springs, where the rich mountain minerals will leave your skin feeling brand new. Once you’ve achieved maximum relaxation, hit up Tokyo’s bustling night life or go hiking in Kamakura.
What Japan lacks in square footage it makes up for in endless options for your itinerary. In this case, size definitely doesn’t matter! Consider booking a tour that allows you to see all of the country’s unique highlights, without missing the subtleties you can enjoy as a backpacker: http://www.tourradar.com/d/japan
Remember to pack clothes appropriate for the region you’re visiting, and if you’re planning on travelling from the North to the South outside of summer months, make sure you bring everything from flip-flops to snow boots.
Japan’s currency is the Japanese Yen. Credit card and debit transactions aren’t common, so be sure to bring plenty of cash with you no matter where you travel within the country. Dining out doesn’t have to be expensive if you visit the right restaurants, and you can often enjoy a pre-fix menu for lunch for a very reasonable cost. Be sure to sample the Japanese whiskeys, as Japan is an expert whiskey distiller!
— About Japan —
With a population of nearly 130 million, this island nation is resides in the Pacific Ocean and has everything from dense cities to mountainous national parks. You’ll discover that there’s countless reasons to move Japan up to the #1 spot on your bucket list. Sixty-six percent of the country is covered by trees and the Japanese enjoy the highest life expectancy in the world at 83.7 years.
Learn more about Japan and the inspiring experiences that await you by reading Days to Come: http://www.tourradar.com/days-to-come/
#gotouring with TourRadar: http://www.tourradar.com
-----------------------------------------------
Let’s get social! Follow us on:
Twitter: https://twitter.com/TourRadar
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TourRadar/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/tourradar/
Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/tourradar/
Snapchat: @tourradar

Japan: The UltimateTravelGuide by TourRadar gives you all the info you need to explore the land of the rising sun. Learn some basics about the country, including what you have to do & see once you arrive, when it's best to travel and which food & drinks you definitely need to enjoy throughout your journey.
-----------------------------------------------
Japan remains one of the most intensely fascinating places in the world, effortlessly intertwining modernity and tradition. Seek serenity in Kyoto by visiting one of thousands of temples spread throughout this former capital, or go skiing in Niseko or summit Mt. Fuji. Of course you can also kick back in one of the country’s many hot springs, where the rich mountain minerals will leave your skin feeling brand new. Once you’ve achieved maximum relaxation, hit up Tokyo’s bustling night life or go hiking in Kamakura.
What Japan lacks in square footage it makes up for in endless options for your itinerary. In this case, size definitely doesn’t matter! Consider booking a tour that allows you to see all of the country’s unique highlights, without missing the subtleties you can enjoy as a backpacker: http://www.tourradar.com/d/japan
Remember to pack clothes appropriate for the region you’re visiting, and if you’re planning on travelling from the North to the South outside of summer months, make sure you bring everything from flip-flops to snow boots.
Japan’s currency is the Japanese Yen. Credit card and debit transactions aren’t common, so be sure to bring plenty of cash with you no matter where you travel within the country. Dining out doesn’t have to be expensive if you visit the right restaurants, and you can often enjoy a pre-fix menu for lunch for a very reasonable cost. Be sure to sample the Japanese whiskeys, as Japan is an expert whiskey distiller!
— About Japan —
With a population of nearly 130 million, this island nation is resides in the Pacific Ocean and has everything from dense cities to mountainous national parks. You’ll discover that there’s countless reasons to move Japan up to the #1 spot on your bucket list. Sixty-six percent of the country is covered by trees and the Japanese enjoy the highest life expectancy in the world at 83.7 years.
Learn more about Japan and the inspiring experiences that await you by reading Days to Come: http://www.tourradar.com/days-to-come/
#gotouring with TourRadar: http://www.tourradar.com
-----------------------------------------------
Let’s get social! Follow us on:
Twitter: https://twitter.com/TourRadar
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TourRadar/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/tourradar/
Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/tourradar/
Snapchat: @tourradar

Japan Travel Guide | BEST TIPS

Are you interested in traveling to Japan? YES. Japan is really tourist-friendly so I'm certain you'll have a great time and I hope my travel tips come in handy ...

Are you interested in traveling to Japan? YES. Japan is really tourist-friendly so I'm certain you'll have a great time and I hope my travel tips come in handy :) Let me know what you thought of it in the comment section below!
Getting Married in Japan | Waifu Laifu: https://youtu.be/dk4phmbrhH8
FREE 30 Day PremiumTrial of Crunchyroll: www.crunchyroll.com/reinascully
——————————————
Thank You for Watching!
——————————————
*twitter: @reinascully
*instagram: @reinascully
*facebook: http://on.fb.me/1FzpBWD
*edited by: @fluskenraider

Are you interested in traveling to Japan? YES. Japan is really tourist-friendly so I'm certain you'll have a great time and I hope my travel tips come in handy :) Let me know what you thought of it in the comment section below!
Getting Married in Japan | Waifu Laifu: https://youtu.be/dk4phmbrhH8
FREE 30 Day PremiumTrial of Crunchyroll: www.crunchyroll.com/reinascully
——————————————
Thank You for Watching!
——————————————
*twitter: @reinascully
*instagram: @reinascully
*facebook: http://on.fb.me/1FzpBWD
*edited by: @fluskenraider

25 Things To Do in Tokyo, Japan (Watch This Before You Go)

Get info about things to do, where to stay, and the best food to eat on your visit to Tokyo, Japan. Here's the guide: https://migrationology.com/tokyo-travel-gu...

Get info about things to do, where to stay, and the best food to eat on your visit to Tokyo, Japan. Here's the guide: https://migrationology.com/tokyo-travel-guide-for-food-lovers/
Tokyo (東京), Japan, is one of the world's greatest cities, and there's so much to do and see when you visit. From temples and shrines, to gardens and museums, you'll never run out of attractions. Out of all the things you could do, I've chosen a top 25 list for this awesome city (and just so you know food is my first choice in Tokyo)!
1. Ameya-Yokochō (アメヤ横丁) - A giant open air market that offers clothes, cosmetics, food, and restaurants and bars.
2. Meiji Shrine (明治神宮) - This Shinto shrine, surrounded by beautiful forest, is extremely significant.
3. Ryogoku Kokugikan (両国国技館) - Even if it's not fight season, you can go to the free sumo museum and eat sumo chankonabe.
4. Shinjuku Gyoen National Garden (新宿御苑) - The garden is a beautiful attraction in Tokyo, with French gardens, Japanese gardens, and a green house.
5. Ginza (銀座) / Yurakucho (有楽町) - Ginza is a great area of town for upscale shopping and dining, while Yurakucho is famous for Izakaya bars and restaurants under the railroad track.
6. Tokyo Metropolitan Government Building (東京都庁舎) - There are a lot of things to do in Tokyo where you have to pay, but here, you can go to the 45th floor for free.
7. Tsukiji Market (築地市場) - One of the most famous attractions in all of Tokyo is the Tsukiji Market (築地市場), the biggest seafood market in the world.
8. Shibuya (渋谷区) - With the busiest intersection in the world, Shibuya (渋谷区) is also home to shopping and restaurant.
9. Sumida River (隅田川) - At Tokyo's Sumida River, you can either just walk around the park and enjoy the riverside views, or you can take the Tokyo Cruise in a boat.
10. Tokyo Imperial Palace (皇居) - This is the home of the emperor of Japan. To enter the grounds, you have to make a tour booking on the official website
11. UenoPark (上野公園), Tokyo National Museum (東京国立博物館) - Ueno Park is a huge public park in Tokyo with shrines, gardens and a number of museums.
12. Tokyo Skytree (東京スカイツリー) - They call it Tokyo's biggest attractions. It's a huge communications tower with various viewing decks and galleries.
13. Harajuku (原宿), Takeshita Street (竹下通り) - Famous for its street market and cosplay that takes place, this is a place in the city to see and be seen.
14. Senso-ji (金龍山浅草寺) - Visiting this temple is one of the top things to do in Tokyo, frequented by both tourists and religious pilgrims. It's the oldest temple in Tokyo.
15. Edo-Tokyo Museum (江戸東京博物館) - It looks a little like a UFO, but it's one of Tokyo's main museums, that aims to preserve the history of the city.
16. Fine Dining - Let's just face it, Tokyo is one of the best cities in the world for high class dining - atmosphere, presentation, food, it's all just stunning!
17. AkihabaraElectric Town (秋葉原電気街) - If you love electronics and gaming, you're going to love the area of Akihabara. You'll also find those infamous maid cafes here.
18. Tokyo Stock Exchange (東京証券取引所) - Another free attraction in Tokyo is to be a guest at the stock exchange where you can see the Japanese Nikkei being traded.
19. Roppongi (六本木) - Home to the Mori Art Museum and a hotspot for nightlife in the city, Roppongi is an exciting area of town.
20. Odaiba (お台場) - This area of Tokyo is full of things to do like Legoland, and Palette Town, an indoor amusement park. It's also known as Tokyo's entertainment island.
21. Yoyogi Park (代々木公園) - Located next to Meiji Shrine, and just a short distance from Harajuku and Shinjuku, this park is popular for exercise and dance.
22. Nezu (根津), Yanaka (谷中 (台東区) - Tokyo is a truly modern city, but there are a couple places like Nezu and Yanaka that have held strong to their traditional and cultural roots.
23. Onsen (温泉) - You've got to strip down naked before you can enter a Japanese public bath.
24. Mount Takao (高尾山) - Just 50 km from central Tokyo, this mountain is popular for climbing and is a sacred religious mountains. Makes a good day trip from Tokyo.
25. Food - Finally, food is the reason I visited Japan, and I think eating is by all means one of the best things to do in Tokyo. Food is everywhere, and not only does it taste amazing, but the care that goes into Japanese cuisine is incredible.
Thank you very much for watching this video that includes some of the best things to do in Tokyo. I hope it will give you inspiration to visit and eat through this amazing city.
Tokyo travel guide for food lovers: http://wp.me/psd9b-4EA
Subscribe: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=migrationology
All music in this video courtesy of AudioNetwork.com
Support my videos: http://migrationology.com/donate/

Get info about things to do, where to stay, and the best food to eat on your visit to Tokyo, Japan. Here's the guide: https://migrationology.com/tokyo-travel-guide-for-food-lovers/
Tokyo (東京), Japan, is one of the world's greatest cities, and there's so much to do and see when you visit. From temples and shrines, to gardens and museums, you'll never run out of attractions. Out of all the things you could do, I've chosen a top 25 list for this awesome city (and just so you know food is my first choice in Tokyo)!
1. Ameya-Yokochō (アメヤ横丁) - A giant open air market that offers clothes, cosmetics, food, and restaurants and bars.
2. Meiji Shrine (明治神宮) - This Shinto shrine, surrounded by beautiful forest, is extremely significant.
3. Ryogoku Kokugikan (両国国技館) - Even if it's not fight season, you can go to the free sumo museum and eat sumo chankonabe.
4. Shinjuku Gyoen National Garden (新宿御苑) - The garden is a beautiful attraction in Tokyo, with French gardens, Japanese gardens, and a green house.
5. Ginza (銀座) / Yurakucho (有楽町) - Ginza is a great area of town for upscale shopping and dining, while Yurakucho is famous for Izakaya bars and restaurants under the railroad track.
6. Tokyo Metropolitan Government Building (東京都庁舎) - There are a lot of things to do in Tokyo where you have to pay, but here, you can go to the 45th floor for free.
7. Tsukiji Market (築地市場) - One of the most famous attractions in all of Tokyo is the Tsukiji Market (築地市場), the biggest seafood market in the world.
8. Shibuya (渋谷区) - With the busiest intersection in the world, Shibuya (渋谷区) is also home to shopping and restaurant.
9. Sumida River (隅田川) - At Tokyo's Sumida River, you can either just walk around the park and enjoy the riverside views, or you can take the Tokyo Cruise in a boat.
10. Tokyo Imperial Palace (皇居) - This is the home of the emperor of Japan. To enter the grounds, you have to make a tour booking on the official website
11. UenoPark (上野公園), Tokyo National Museum (東京国立博物館) - Ueno Park is a huge public park in Tokyo with shrines, gardens and a number of museums.
12. Tokyo Skytree (東京スカイツリー) - They call it Tokyo's biggest attractions. It's a huge communications tower with various viewing decks and galleries.
13. Harajuku (原宿), Takeshita Street (竹下通り) - Famous for its street market and cosplay that takes place, this is a place in the city to see and be seen.
14. Senso-ji (金龍山浅草寺) - Visiting this temple is one of the top things to do in Tokyo, frequented by both tourists and religious pilgrims. It's the oldest temple in Tokyo.
15. Edo-Tokyo Museum (江戸東京博物館) - It looks a little like a UFO, but it's one of Tokyo's main museums, that aims to preserve the history of the city.
16. Fine Dining - Let's just face it, Tokyo is one of the best cities in the world for high class dining - atmosphere, presentation, food, it's all just stunning!
17. AkihabaraElectric Town (秋葉原電気街) - If you love electronics and gaming, you're going to love the area of Akihabara. You'll also find those infamous maid cafes here.
18. Tokyo Stock Exchange (東京証券取引所) - Another free attraction in Tokyo is to be a guest at the stock exchange where you can see the Japanese Nikkei being traded.
19. Roppongi (六本木) - Home to the Mori Art Museum and a hotspot for nightlife in the city, Roppongi is an exciting area of town.
20. Odaiba (お台場) - This area of Tokyo is full of things to do like Legoland, and Palette Town, an indoor amusement park. It's also known as Tokyo's entertainment island.
21. Yoyogi Park (代々木公園) - Located next to Meiji Shrine, and just a short distance from Harajuku and Shinjuku, this park is popular for exercise and dance.
22. Nezu (根津), Yanaka (谷中 (台東区) - Tokyo is a truly modern city, but there are a couple places like Nezu and Yanaka that have held strong to their traditional and cultural roots.
23. Onsen (温泉) - You've got to strip down naked before you can enter a Japanese public bath.
24. Mount Takao (高尾山) - Just 50 km from central Tokyo, this mountain is popular for climbing and is a sacred religious mountains. Makes a good day trip from Tokyo.
25. Food - Finally, food is the reason I visited Japan, and I think eating is by all means one of the best things to do in Tokyo. Food is everywhere, and not only does it taste amazing, but the care that goes into Japanese cuisine is incredible.
Thank you very much for watching this video that includes some of the best things to do in Tokyo. I hope it will give you inspiration to visit and eat through this amazing city.
Tokyo travel guide for food lovers: http://wp.me/psd9b-4EA
Subscribe: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=migrationology
All music in this video courtesy of AudioNetwork.com
Support my videos: http://migrationology.com/donate/

Travel Tips for Japan You Must Know!

We've traveled to Japan a lot as visitors, and now that we live here, we've brought in a lot of visitors as well. Here are the top travel tips for Japan that w...

We've traveled to Japan a lot as visitors, and now that we live here, we've brought in a lot of visitors as well. Here are the top travel tips for Japan that we've learned over the years, so hopefully your trip here will go a lot more smoothly!
If that's not enough, we wrote a few more tips on our blog
☞ http://www.eatyourkimchi.com/travel-tips-for-japan-you-must-know
Please ask in the comments if there's anything else you want to know about traveling to Japan
Subscribe for more videos:
☞ http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=simonandmartina
Bloopers & Extra footage from this video:
☞ https://youtu.be/8J0BnzA75Y8

We've traveled to Japan a lot as visitors, and now that we live here, we've brought in a lot of visitors as well. Here are the top travel tips for Japan that we've learned over the years, so hopefully your trip here will go a lot more smoothly!
If that's not enough, we wrote a few more tips on our blog
☞ http://www.eatyourkimchi.com/travel-tips-for-japan-you-must-know
Please ask in the comments if there's anything else you want to know about traveling to Japan
Subscribe for more videos:
☞ http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=simonandmartina
Bloopers & Extra footage from this video:
☞ https://youtu.be/8J0BnzA75Y8

Want more info about Tokyo transportation and Metro? Click here: http://www.tokyosubwayticket.com/ph/
AIRBNB Promo Code Here: http://www.airbnb.com/c/eheussaff
This is a great video for people looking for recommendations on what to do in Tokyo. From great restaurants to museums, we tried to pack as much information as we could. This is the type of information I wish I had before my first trip to this huge city.
This was a long time coming. Ever since we started doing travel shows, I knew I wanted to cover Tokyo. We just never got the opportunity to and it always seemed like a gargantuan task. We were lucky enough to link up with Tokyo Metro to allow us to create this video. I hope you guys enjoy it and share it with your friends if you did!
http://www.tokyometro.jp/en/ticket/value/1day/
Sorry for all those who already watched this and left us your comments. I read all of them and i'm so sad that i had to take the video down. Thanks to some of the viewers, we found a glitch in the video file that we missed at the export and therefore had to re-upload a clean version. Thanks for your patience!
Shot and Edited by Seabiscuit Films
http://seabiscuitfilms.com/
Scored and Mastered by
Please subscribe! http://goo.gl/TAhuPT
Subscribe to:
Wil Dasovich - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCSir19L_390tAg4IbCggvCg
Check out my new game on the Google Play Store!
Erwan's Eatery
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.xeleb.erwan2&hl=en
Full posts on www.thefatkidinside.com
ig: erwan
twitter: erwanheussaff
facebook.com/thefatkidinside
Please leave us a comment if you want us to try something!
Erwan Heussaff
FAQ
What are you?
Im FrenchFilipino, i work in the restaurant, bar and production industries. I create food and travel content.
I live in the Philippines.
What Camera do you use?
Usually a sony a7sii, cranes, dji osmo, gopro hero 5, dji mavic.
I use a 85mm, 35mm, 50mm, 10-18mm and 20-70mm lenses.
What editing software do you use?
When i edit, its usually do it with Premiere Pro on a DELLXPS 15
How old are you?
30
What did you study?
International Business in France
How did you get into youtube?
I've always loved making food videos and that's how it started. Youtube starts off as a passion. Dont get into it if you are looking to make it your job. It doesn't work that way :)
Why arent you on TV?
Because the internet is easier and its free for you guys hahaha! Also we are currently working on producing TV shows ourselves and i have some TV shows floating around.
Who writes/produces the shows?
Moi
Who shoots the actual shows we have on?
Seabiscuit films.
Who shots the vlog/travel diary style videos?
I do.
Peanut Butter or Nutella?
Peanut buttttttttttttter
-------PLAYLISTS--------
Tastemade collaborations
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLlaLRniCHL9RvqNN0dSdfN2mRXHQ9iKnm
Check our new Travel ShowOvernight!
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLlaLRniCHL9S7Jva6MlVA8Y7u6lkr5AY9
Cooking in the Mountains!
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLlaLRniCHL9S-157u7Fv7-CSKa9aSM_NN
Travel Diaries
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLlaLRniCHL9QVZVThhvMFWAc6iqW5nGeN
Cocktails
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLlaLRniCHL9SJ0W5c-qfOZXqeK1gYGtdg
Recipes
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLlaLRniCHL9TF-MUral5HHsQ_20puP3Jp
Filipino Recipes
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLlaLRniCHL9S0Xgp0BgIhf36GkzMJR0ga
Landscapes - Series about produce and farming
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLlaLRniCHL9TWASqWltV7DrxyY5zUWmAi

Want more info about Tokyo transportation and Metro? Click here: http://www.tokyosubwayticket.com/ph/
AIRBNB Promo Code Here: http://www.airbnb.com/c/eheussaff
This is a great video for people looking for recommendations on what to do in Tokyo. From great restaurants to museums, we tried to pack as much information as we could. This is the type of information I wish I had before my first trip to this huge city.
This was a long time coming. Ever since we started doing travel shows, I knew I wanted to cover Tokyo. We just never got the opportunity to and it always seemed like a gargantuan task. We were lucky enough to link up with Tokyo Metro to allow us to create this video. I hope you guys enjoy it and share it with your friends if you did!
http://www.tokyometro.jp/en/ticket/value/1day/
Sorry for all those who already watched this and left us your comments. I read all of them and i'm so sad that i had to take the video down. Thanks to some of the viewers, we found a glitch in the video file that we missed at the export and therefore had to re-upload a clean version. Thanks for your patience!
Shot and Edited by Seabiscuit Films
http://seabiscuitfilms.com/
Scored and Mastered by
Please subscribe! http://goo.gl/TAhuPT
Subscribe to:
Wil Dasovich - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCSir19L_390tAg4IbCggvCg
Check out my new game on the Google Play Store!
Erwan's Eatery
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.xeleb.erwan2&hl=en
Full posts on www.thefatkidinside.com
ig: erwan
twitter: erwanheussaff
facebook.com/thefatkidinside
Please leave us a comment if you want us to try something!
Erwan Heussaff
FAQ
What are you?
Im FrenchFilipino, i work in the restaurant, bar and production industries. I create food and travel content.
I live in the Philippines.
What Camera do you use?
Usually a sony a7sii, cranes, dji osmo, gopro hero 5, dji mavic.
I use a 85mm, 35mm, 50mm, 10-18mm and 20-70mm lenses.
What editing software do you use?
When i edit, its usually do it with Premiere Pro on a DELLXPS 15
How old are you?
30
What did you study?
International Business in France
How did you get into youtube?
I've always loved making food videos and that's how it started. Youtube starts off as a passion. Dont get into it if you are looking to make it your job. It doesn't work that way :)
Why arent you on TV?
Because the internet is easier and its free for you guys hahaha! Also we are currently working on producing TV shows ourselves and i have some TV shows floating around.
Who writes/produces the shows?
Moi
Who shoots the actual shows we have on?
Seabiscuit films.
Who shots the vlog/travel diary style videos?
I do.
Peanut Butter or Nutella?
Peanut buttttttttttttter
-------PLAYLISTS--------
Tastemade collaborations
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLlaLRniCHL9RvqNN0dSdfN2mRXHQ9iKnm
Check our new Travel ShowOvernight!
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLlaLRniCHL9S7Jva6MlVA8Y7u6lkr5AY9
Cooking in the Mountains!
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLlaLRniCHL9S-157u7Fv7-CSKa9aSM_NN
Travel Diaries
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLlaLRniCHL9QVZVThhvMFWAc6iqW5nGeN
Cocktails
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLlaLRniCHL9SJ0W5c-qfOZXqeK1gYGtdg
Recipes
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLlaLRniCHL9TF-MUral5HHsQ_20puP3Jp
Filipino Recipes
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLlaLRniCHL9S0Xgp0BgIhf36GkzMJR0ga
Landscapes - Series about produce and farming
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLlaLRniCHL9TWASqWltV7DrxyY5zUWmAi

Tokyo Vacation Travel Guide | Expedia

https://www.expedia.com/Tokyo.d179900.Destination-Travel-Guides
Welcome to Tokyo, the capital of Japan and the epitome of the word “megacity.”
In this vast me...

https://www.expedia.com/Tokyo.d179900.Destination-Travel-Guides
Welcome to Tokyo, the capital of Japan and the epitome of the word “megacity.”
In this vast metropolis, ancient traditions blend with futuristic buildings, and your Tokyo sightseeing will take you to representations of each. Pay your respects at temples set in forested hillsides, then flex your credit card in one of the shopping districts, before sitting down to a five-star meal…all in one day.
Your Tokyo tour begins with the subway and train system, which will take you all over this sprawling city. Tokyo is home to some 35 million people, many of which you’ll meet as its public transit carries you throughout its many neighborhoods. Make a stop in Asakusa, a temple district nestled in leafy trees with skyscrapers towering in the background. There you’ll visit Nakamisi Dori, a street loaded with food vendors and religious charms. Get to know the city a little better in the Harajuku district, home to cutting-edge fashion, a thriving, youth-centered culture, and the famous Yoyogi Park. The park stands out in stern contrast to the rest of the neighborhood; this sprawling, 134-acre green space is where locals slow down after a frenzied week of work and play.
As night falls, make your way to Shinjuku. Many of Tokyo’s premier restaurants and pubs span Shinjuku’s streets, and you can indulge in succulent 5-star meals or sample with fast food from local vendors. Watch a movie, do some karaoke, and linger with fellow travelers and friendly locals alike.
What was your favorite part of Tokyo?
Visit our Tokyo travel guide page for more information or to plan your next vacation!
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Follow us on social media:
Twitter: https://twitter.com/Expedia
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/expedia
Instagram: http://instagram.com/expedia
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--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Follow us on our travel blog, Viewfinder:
http://viewfinder.expedia.com/

https://www.expedia.com/Tokyo.d179900.Destination-Travel-Guides
Welcome to Tokyo, the capital of Japan and the epitome of the word “megacity.”
In this vast metropolis, ancient traditions blend with futuristic buildings, and your Tokyo sightseeing will take you to representations of each. Pay your respects at temples set in forested hillsides, then flex your credit card in one of the shopping districts, before sitting down to a five-star meal…all in one day.
Your Tokyo tour begins with the subway and train system, which will take you all over this sprawling city. Tokyo is home to some 35 million people, many of which you’ll meet as its public transit carries you throughout its many neighborhoods. Make a stop in Asakusa, a temple district nestled in leafy trees with skyscrapers towering in the background. There you’ll visit Nakamisi Dori, a street loaded with food vendors and religious charms. Get to know the city a little better in the Harajuku district, home to cutting-edge fashion, a thriving, youth-centered culture, and the famous Yoyogi Park. The park stands out in stern contrast to the rest of the neighborhood; this sprawling, 134-acre green space is where locals slow down after a frenzied week of work and play.
As night falls, make your way to Shinjuku. Many of Tokyo’s premier restaurants and pubs span Shinjuku’s streets, and you can indulge in succulent 5-star meals or sample with fast food from local vendors. Watch a movie, do some karaoke, and linger with fellow travelers and friendly locals alike.
What was your favorite part of Tokyo?
Visit our Tokyo travel guide page for more information or to plan your next vacation!
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Follow us on social media:
Twitter: https://twitter.com/Expedia
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/expedia
Instagram: http://instagram.com/expedia
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Google+: https://plus.google.com/+Expedia
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Follow us on our travel blog, Viewfinder:
http://viewfinder.expedia.com/

Kyoto Vacation Travel Guide | Expedia

Kyoto, Japan, has long been considered one of the country’s most beautiful cities. Once the capital of the nation, Kyoto is now an ultra-modern haven that retai...

Kyoto, Japan, has long been considered one of the country’s most beautiful cities. Once the capital of the nation, Kyoto is now an ultra-modern haven that retains a great deal of its ancient charm.
To see some of this long-established glamour, make your way to Kyoto Tower. Just two miles east of the tower is Gion, an entertainment quarter and home to many of Kyoto’s famous geishas. As you walk east through Gion, you’ll find even more old architecture, including several Ryokan, or traditional Japanese inns. Many date back to the Edo period, which ranged from 1603 to 1868.
During your Kyoto tour, take a rickshaw ride to the Sannen-zaka and Ninen-zaka districts, where cars are prohibited and traditional teahouses and temples adorn the nearby landscape. Kyoto is known as “The City of Ten ThousandShrines” for good reason. Walk through the great open plazas of the Haian Shrine, or spend a quiet moment in the intimate confines of the Shorenin Temple and its beautiful gardens.
The most famous of Kyoto’s temples is Fushimi Inari-taisha, a stunning red complex that sprawls over Mount Inari, which is named after and dedicated to Inari, the fox spirit. A hike to the summit takes about two hours, and will lead you through thousands of colorful sub-shrines and thick, ancient forest. Once you’re at the top, you’ll have a stunning view of Kyoto.
What is your favorite part of Kyoto?
Visit our Kyoto travel guide page for more information or to plan your next vacation!
https://www.expedia.com/Kyoto.d6131486.Destination-Travel-Guides
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Follow us on social media:
Twitter: https://twitter.com/Expedia
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/expedia
Instagram: http://instagram.com/expedia
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Google+: https://plus.google.com/+Expedia
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Follow us on our travel blog, Viewfinder:
http://viewfinder.expedia.com/

Kyoto, Japan, has long been considered one of the country’s most beautiful cities. Once the capital of the nation, Kyoto is now an ultra-modern haven that retains a great deal of its ancient charm.
To see some of this long-established glamour, make your way to Kyoto Tower. Just two miles east of the tower is Gion, an entertainment quarter and home to many of Kyoto’s famous geishas. As you walk east through Gion, you’ll find even more old architecture, including several Ryokan, or traditional Japanese inns. Many date back to the Edo period, which ranged from 1603 to 1868.
During your Kyoto tour, take a rickshaw ride to the Sannen-zaka and Ninen-zaka districts, where cars are prohibited and traditional teahouses and temples adorn the nearby landscape. Kyoto is known as “The City of Ten ThousandShrines” for good reason. Walk through the great open plazas of the Haian Shrine, or spend a quiet moment in the intimate confines of the Shorenin Temple and its beautiful gardens.
The most famous of Kyoto’s temples is Fushimi Inari-taisha, a stunning red complex that sprawls over Mount Inari, which is named after and dedicated to Inari, the fox spirit. A hike to the summit takes about two hours, and will lead you through thousands of colorful sub-shrines and thick, ancient forest. Once you’re at the top, you’ll have a stunning view of Kyoto.
What is your favorite part of Kyoto?
Visit our Kyoto travel guide page for more information or to plan your next vacation!
https://www.expedia.com/Kyoto.d6131486.Destination-Travel-Guides
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Follow us on social media:
Twitter: https://twitter.com/Expedia
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/expedia
Instagram: http://instagram.com/expedia
Pinterest: http://www.pinterest.com/Expedia/
Google+: https://plus.google.com/+Expedia
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Follow us on our travel blog, Viewfinder:
http://viewfinder.expedia.com/

JapanTravelGuide 2016 - Top things to do in Japan 2016 - Japan trip 2016 - Japan tourism & vacations - Tourist attractions in Japan
Travel Videos HD, World Travel Guide http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=World1Tube
Japan, known as Nihon or Nippon (日本) in Japanese, is a nation of islands in East Asia.
See in Japan
===============
Castles
-------------
When most Westerners think of castles, they naturally think of their own in places like England and France. However, Japan too was a nation of castle-builders. In its feudal days, you could find multiple castles in nearly every prefecture.
Original Castles
Because of bombings in WWII, fires, edicts to tear down castles, etc. only twelve of Japan's castles are considered to be originals, which have donjons that date back to the days when they were still used. Four of them are located on the island of Shikoku, two just north in the Chugoku region, two in Kansai, three in the Chubu region, and one in the northern Tohoku region. There are no original castles in Kyushu, Kanto, Hokkaido, or Okinawa.
The original castles are:
Uwajima CastleMatsuyama CastleKochi CastleMarugame CastleMatsue CastleBitchu Matsuyama CastleHimeji CastleHikone CastleInuyama CastleMaruoka CastleMatsumoto CastleHirosaki Castle
(Nijo Castle is an original however, it was actually an Imperial residence rather than a castle, so it is not included on the list of originals)
Reconstructions and Ruins
----------------------------------------------
Japan has many reconstructed castles, many of which receive more visitors than the originals. A reconstructed castle means that the donjon was rebuilt in modern times, but many of these still have other original structures within the castle grounds. For example, three of Nagoya Castle's turrets are authentic. Reconstructions still offer a glimpse into the past and many, like Osaka Castle are also museums housing important artifacts. Kumamoto Castle is considered to be among the best reconstructions, because most of the structures have been reconstructed instead of just the donjon. The only reconstructed castle in Hokkaido is Matsumae Castle. Okinawa's Shuri Castle is unique among Japan's castles, because it is not a "Japanese" castle; it is from the Ryukyuan Kingdom and was built with the Chinese architectural style, along with some original Okinawan elements.
Ruins typically feature only the castle walls or parts of the original layout are visible. Although they lack the structures of reconstructed castles, ruins often feel more authentic without the concrete reconstructions that sometimes feel too commercial and touristy. Many ruins maintain historical significance, such as Tsuyama Castle, which was so large and impressive, it was considered to be the best in the nation. Today, the castle walls are all that remain but the area is filled with thousands of cherry blossoms. This is common among many ruins, as well as reconstructions. Takeda Castle is famed for the gorgeous view of the surrounding area from the ruins.
Gardens
-------------------
Japan is famous for its gardens, known for its unique aesthestics both in landscape gardens and Zen rock/sand gardens. The nation has designated an official "Top Three Gardens", based on their beauty, size, authenticity (gardens that have not been drastically altered), and historical significance. Those gardens are Kairakuen in Mito, Kenrokuen in Kanazawa, and Korakuen in Okayama. The largest garden, and the favorite of many travellers, is actually Ritsurin Park in Takamatsu.
Rock and sand gardens can typically be found in temples, specifically those of Zen Buddhism. The most famous of these is RyoanjiTemple in Kyoto, but such temples can be found throughout Japan. Moss gardens are also popular in Japan and Koke-dera, also in Kyoto, has one of the nation's best. Reservations are required to visit just so that they can ensure the moss is always flourishing and not trampled.
Spiritual Sites
------------------------
Regardless of your travel interests, it's difficult to visit Japan without at least seeing a few shrines and temples. Buddhist and Shinto sites are the most common, although there are some noteworthy spiritual sites of other religions, as well.
Buddhist
-----------------------------
Buddhism has had a profound impact on Japan ever since it was introduced in the 6th century. Like shrines, temples can be found in every city, and many different sects exist.
Some of the holiest sites are made up of large complexes on mountaintops and include Mount Koya (Japan's most prestigious place to be buried and head temple of Shingon Buddhism), Mount Hiei (set here when Kyoto became the capital to remove Buddhism from politics, the head of the Tendai sect of Buddhism), and Mount Osore (considered to be the "Gateway to Hell", it features many monuments and graves in a volcanic wasteland).

JapanTravelGuide 2016 - Top things to do in Japan 2016 - Japan trip 2016 - Japan tourism & vacations - Tourist attractions in Japan
Travel Videos HD, World Travel Guide http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=World1Tube
Japan, known as Nihon or Nippon (日本) in Japanese, is a nation of islands in East Asia.
See in Japan
===============
Castles
-------------
When most Westerners think of castles, they naturally think of their own in places like England and France. However, Japan too was a nation of castle-builders. In its feudal days, you could find multiple castles in nearly every prefecture.
Original Castles
Because of bombings in WWII, fires, edicts to tear down castles, etc. only twelve of Japan's castles are considered to be originals, which have donjons that date back to the days when they were still used. Four of them are located on the island of Shikoku, two just north in the Chugoku region, two in Kansai, three in the Chubu region, and one in the northern Tohoku region. There are no original castles in Kyushu, Kanto, Hokkaido, or Okinawa.
The original castles are:
Uwajima CastleMatsuyama CastleKochi CastleMarugame CastleMatsue CastleBitchu Matsuyama CastleHimeji CastleHikone CastleInuyama CastleMaruoka CastleMatsumoto CastleHirosaki Castle
(Nijo Castle is an original however, it was actually an Imperial residence rather than a castle, so it is not included on the list of originals)
Reconstructions and Ruins
----------------------------------------------
Japan has many reconstructed castles, many of which receive more visitors than the originals. A reconstructed castle means that the donjon was rebuilt in modern times, but many of these still have other original structures within the castle grounds. For example, three of Nagoya Castle's turrets are authentic. Reconstructions still offer a glimpse into the past and many, like Osaka Castle are also museums housing important artifacts. Kumamoto Castle is considered to be among the best reconstructions, because most of the structures have been reconstructed instead of just the donjon. The only reconstructed castle in Hokkaido is Matsumae Castle. Okinawa's Shuri Castle is unique among Japan's castles, because it is not a "Japanese" castle; it is from the Ryukyuan Kingdom and was built with the Chinese architectural style, along with some original Okinawan elements.
Ruins typically feature only the castle walls or parts of the original layout are visible. Although they lack the structures of reconstructed castles, ruins often feel more authentic without the concrete reconstructions that sometimes feel too commercial and touristy. Many ruins maintain historical significance, such as Tsuyama Castle, which was so large and impressive, it was considered to be the best in the nation. Today, the castle walls are all that remain but the area is filled with thousands of cherry blossoms. This is common among many ruins, as well as reconstructions. Takeda Castle is famed for the gorgeous view of the surrounding area from the ruins.
Gardens
-------------------
Japan is famous for its gardens, known for its unique aesthestics both in landscape gardens and Zen rock/sand gardens. The nation has designated an official "Top Three Gardens", based on their beauty, size, authenticity (gardens that have not been drastically altered), and historical significance. Those gardens are Kairakuen in Mito, Kenrokuen in Kanazawa, and Korakuen in Okayama. The largest garden, and the favorite of many travellers, is actually Ritsurin Park in Takamatsu.
Rock and sand gardens can typically be found in temples, specifically those of Zen Buddhism. The most famous of these is RyoanjiTemple in Kyoto, but such temples can be found throughout Japan. Moss gardens are also popular in Japan and Koke-dera, also in Kyoto, has one of the nation's best. Reservations are required to visit just so that they can ensure the moss is always flourishing and not trampled.
Spiritual Sites
------------------------
Regardless of your travel interests, it's difficult to visit Japan without at least seeing a few shrines and temples. Buddhist and Shinto sites are the most common, although there are some noteworthy spiritual sites of other religions, as well.
Buddhist
-----------------------------
Buddhism has had a profound impact on Japan ever since it was introduced in the 6th century. Like shrines, temples can be found in every city, and many different sects exist.
Some of the holiest sites are made up of large complexes on mountaintops and include Mount Koya (Japan's most prestigious place to be buried and head temple of Shingon Buddhism), Mount Hiei (set here when Kyoto became the capital to remove Buddhism from politics, the head of the Tendai sect of Buddhism), and Mount Osore (considered to be the "Gateway to Hell", it features many monuments and graves in a volcanic wasteland).

JAPAN TRAVEL GUIDE HD

Incredible video of Japan with information about the main cities, best places and prices.
THANKS FOR WATCHING!!! If you like the content and support the channel...

Incredible video of Japan with information about the main cities, best places and prices.
THANKS FOR WATCHING!!! If you like the content and support the channel, you can give a donation at this link https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_s-xclick&hosted_button_id=4QFST95LX57YJ
PLEASE SHARE, LIKE OR SUBSCRIBE FOR SUPPORT THE CHANNEL.
In this small travel guide of Japan you can see: Tokyo, Kamakura, Nagoya, Kiso valley, Kyoto, Osaka, Nara, Hiroshima and Miyajima
Please share this video if it's useful to your friend or the person you know!!!
You can get more information in http://www.japan-guide.com/ or http://us.jnto.go.jp/top/index.phpEnjoy your Japan trip !!! TRAVEL FOR BEGINNERS
Increible vídeo de Japón con información de las ciudades principales, mejores sitios y precios.
En esta pequeña guia de viaje puede ver: Tokyo, Kamakura, Nagoya, el valle de Kiso, Kyoto, Osaka, Nara, Hiroshima y Miyajima.
Por favor comparte este vídeo si conoces a alguien que le interese
VIAJAR PARA PRINCIPIANTES guia de viaje en español

Incredible video of Japan with information about the main cities, best places and prices.
THANKS FOR WATCHING!!! If you like the content and support the channel, you can give a donation at this link https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_s-xclick&hosted_button_id=4QFST95LX57YJ
PLEASE SHARE, LIKE OR SUBSCRIBE FOR SUPPORT THE CHANNEL.
In this small travel guide of Japan you can see: Tokyo, Kamakura, Nagoya, Kiso valley, Kyoto, Osaka, Nara, Hiroshima and Miyajima
Please share this video if it's useful to your friend or the person you know!!!
You can get more information in http://www.japan-guide.com/ or http://us.jnto.go.jp/top/index.phpEnjoy your Japan trip !!! TRAVEL FOR BEGINNERS
Increible vídeo de Japón con información de las ciudades principales, mejores sitios y precios.
En esta pequeña guia de viaje puede ver: Tokyo, Kamakura, Nagoya, el valle de Kiso, Kyoto, Osaka, Nara, Hiroshima y Miyajima.
Por favor comparte este vídeo si conoces a alguien que le interese
VIAJAR PARA PRINCIPIANTES guia de viaje en español

Masayoshi Son - The Bill Gates of Japan Owner Softbank, Sprint, ARM

At 16, when Masa – as he is now affectionately known – moved from Kitakyushu in south-west Japan to study in San Francisco against his mother’s wishes, he managed to skip three years of high school by taking the college entry exam in three weeks.
The young student convinced his teachers to bend the rules and let him use a Japanese-English dictionary, and give him extra time for the three-day test, he stayed past 11pm finishing it each night, much to the annoyance of the examiner. But by 20, he had graduated and sold his plans for a pocket language translator to Sharp for $1m.
Thirty-five years on and with a net worth of over £20bn, Son has lost none of his drive, as the mogul demonstrated last week with the shock £24bn bid for ARM, the microchip designer whose inventions power the iPhone...

published: 19 Nov 2016

Automated Manufacturing: "This Is Automation" 1955 General Electric

more at http://scitech.quickfound.net/tech/technology_news.html
Some history of automation, and descriptions of how automation was improving factory productivity in the 1950s.
NEWVERSION with improved video & sound: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2w3G3oMqbNs
Public domain film from the Library of CongressPrelinger Archive, slightly cropped to remove uneven edges, with the aspect ratio corrected, and mild video noise reduction applied.
The soundtrack was also processed with volume normalization, noise reduction, clipping reduction, and/or equalization (the resulting sound, though not perfect, is far less noisy than the original).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Automation
Automation is the use of machines, control systems and information technologies to optimize productivity in the pro...

Building Without Nails The Genius of Japanese Carpentry

We've heard of the genius "technology" used in ancient times to build towering monuments with nothing more than primitive tools like stones and ropes. The Egyptian pyramids of old is a great example.
Back in the far east, Japan had plenty to offer the ancient world as well when it came to resourceful inventions and crafts. TraditionalJapaneseCarpenters built houses, temples, and castles, without the use of nails, screws, or bolts.
In a documentary interviewing one of the few remaining practitioners of this seemingly lost art of carpentry, an old Japanese master craftsman exclaims "No bolts, no nails. It lasts longer!". Proudly claiming its effectiveness that no one would be able to argue against its success in the form of several majestic towering temples all over Japan still standing t...

published: 24 Jan 2015

Always Open #42 - Mia Khalifa Does Parkour

JoinBarbara Dunkelman, Tyler Coe, Mariel Salcedo, and special guest Mia Khalifa as they discuss Mia's Twitch streaming, their dating lives being affected by their careers, and more! This episode is sponsored by Lyft (http://lft.to/2k09gCG) and MVMT (http://bit.ly/2y3QkOt) ||| Join FIRST to watch live and get exclusive bonus content: http://bit.ly/298f7WE
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Business Inquiries: http://bit.ly/1DZ77uy
Subscribe to the Rooster Teeth Channel: http://bit.ly/13y3Gum
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Subscribe to the Red vs. Blue Channel: http:...

published: 26 Sep 2017

TechKnow - The farmers growing vegetables with LED lights

In thisTechKnow episode we see how a niche group of commercial farmers in the US is growing pesticide-free produce inside industrial warehouses with the help of artificial light.
GreenSenseFarms runs its vertical farm from a 2,800 square metre warehouse just outside Chicago. The farm is bathed in a pink glow - the effect of the thousands of red and blue LEDs - light-emitting diodes - which enable the plants to photosynthesise.
"We take weather out of the equation," explains Robert Colangelo, founder of Green Sense Farms. "We've created groundhog day here. Each day is consistent and it's the same, so we always get perfect plants every day."
Farming in a controlled environment means the plants grow within a certain time using 98 percent less water. At Green Sense Farms it takes about 42...

published: 28 Nov 2015

🇯🇵 Japan | The Pacifist War | 101 East

Japan : The Pacifist War
In the waters of the East China Sea, a daily show of aggression is displayed around the uninhibited Senakaku/Diaoyutai Islands. Coast guards from China and Japan play a dangerous game of cat and mouse as both sides try to lay claim to the disputed resource-rich territory. The concern is - that the two powers are riding towards war.
101 East presenter Steve Chao takes a trip to the disputed Senkaku/Diaoyutai Islands, 200km from Taiwan and 2,000km from Tokyo. This region is home to rich fishing grounds and potential gas deposits.
With China's growing hostility and nuclear missile threats from North Korea, Japan's newly-elected Prime Minister Shinzo Abe vows to strengthen the country's military power to defend the islands at all cost. And that task falls on Japan's...

published: 14 Jun 2013

Plastic Surgery: The Cost of Beauty - 101 East

Seoul, South Korea's capital, is at the heart of a growing obsession to look perfect.
In theApgujeong district of Seoul, the streets are lined with endless rows of plastic surgery clinics. Business is booming. In South Korea, v-shaped jaws, double eyelids and dimpled smiles are all the rage and people from across the nation, and the world, are flocking to the clinics for plastic surgery, supporting an industry worth $5bn a year.
More than 4,000 clinics provide cosmetic surgery in Seoul, with an estimated 650,000 people a year going under the knife.
But the surgeries performed by some of the clinics do not always live up to patients' expectations and the quest for beauty and profits is putting lives at risk.
So Yi Yoon has suffered many medical problems since having plastic surgery, i...

published: 22 Aug 2014

FINAL FANTASY XIV Documentary Part #1 - "One Point O"

In the first video in our three-part series, we tell the story of how the 1.0 version of FINAL FANTASY 14 came to be. How FINAL FANTASY 11 inspired its design, the ways in which the game fell short and how Square-Enix and the development team reacted to its failure.
Noclip operates entirely through the funding of its members. To help us tell more stories about video games and the people who make them, please consider becoming a patron: https://www.patreon.com/dannyodwyer
Produced by Danny O'Dwyer & JeremyJayne
@dannyodwyer / @adackmusic
Music supplied by AudioNetwork
- Fractured: https://us.audionetwork.com/browse/m/track/fractured_140052
- Dream House 3: https://us.audionetwork.com/browse/m/track/dream-house-3_18139
- Spheres: https://us.audionetwork.com/browse/m/track/spheres_58238
...

published: 23 Jun 2017

Princes of the Yen: Central Bank Truth Documentary 『円の支配者』

“Princes of the Yen: CentralBanks and the Transformation of the Economy” reveals how Japanese society was transformed to suit the agenda and desire of powerful interest groups, and how citizens were kept entirely in the dark about this.
Based on a book by ProfessorRichard Werner, a visiting researcher at the Bank of Japan during the 90s crash, during which the stock market dropped by 80% and house prices by up to 84%. The film uncovers the real cause of this extraordinary period in recent Japanese history.
Making extensive use of archival footage and TV appearances of Richard Werner from the time, the viewer is guided to a new understanding of what makes the world tick. And discovers that what happened in Japan almost 25 years ago is again repeating itself in Europe. To understand how,...

350Z Make Over

This neglected 350Z is broken and missing parts, so it's time to give it a Mighty Make Over...TyreValve Caps available here: https://mightycarmods.com/collections/accessories
►MCMShop: http://www.mightycarmods.com/collections/
►MCM Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/mightycarmods
►MCM Forum: http://forums.mightycarmods.com
SONG LIST:
►I will Find You (MOOG)
https://itunes.apple.com/au/album/i-will-find-you-feat-alphamama-single/id699764701
►Everything I was (MOOG)
https://itunes.apple.com/au/album/everything-i-was-feat-mark-agustin-erin-renee-single/id504782562
Support for this video comes from Need for SpeedPayback who awesomely agreed to sponsor this build. The game is out November 10th 2017!
►Watch the Trailer Here:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kc-OcOduEx0
Also somethin...

published: 02 Nov 2017

100 Million Chinese Lose Their Homes ( NHK documentary)

This NHK documentary deal with the Chinese people, the poor Chinese people of China who are being exiled from major cities. They are being thrown out by a corrupt roofless communist government and order to make room for communist members and those who have big money good and jobs. Remember when you see these kind of documentaries coming out of this communist government the documentary producers or filmmakers are being monitor and are not free to report everything they want. Filmmakers on this documentary has some livery to report, but if things look bad in the documentary can you imagine the stuff that Filmmakers were not able to report on. See documentary and enjoy and I hope you become a subscribe, please pray for the people of China .
TO MAKE YOUR DONATE GIFT:
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At 16, when Masa – as he is now affectionately known – moved from Kitakyushu in south-west Japan to study in San Francisco against his mother’s wishes, he managed to skip three years of high school by taking the college entry exam in three weeks.
The young student convinced his teachers to bend the rules and let him use a Japanese-English dictionary, and give him extra time for the three-day test, he stayed past 11pm finishing it each night, much to the annoyance of the examiner. But by 20, he had graduated and sold his plans for a pocket language translator to Sharp for $1m.
Thirty-five years on and with a net worth of over £20bn, Son has lost none of his drive, as the mogul demonstrated last week with the shock £24bn bid for ARM, the microchip designer whose inventions power the iPhone.
“This is the company I wanted to do for so many years, our most important [deal], my big bet for the future,” he proclaimed.
The agreement appeared ludicrous by some standards. Wrapped up in days, the price –£17 a share – came at an enormous profit multiple. But in the world of Masayoshi Son, it was just another step on his charge to making SoftBank not only the biggest tech company in Japan, but one day, the world.

At 16, when Masa – as he is now affectionately known – moved from Kitakyushu in south-west Japan to study in San Francisco against his mother’s wishes, he managed to skip three years of high school by taking the college entry exam in three weeks.
The young student convinced his teachers to bend the rules and let him use a Japanese-English dictionary, and give him extra time for the three-day test, he stayed past 11pm finishing it each night, much to the annoyance of the examiner. But by 20, he had graduated and sold his plans for a pocket language translator to Sharp for $1m.
Thirty-five years on and with a net worth of over £20bn, Son has lost none of his drive, as the mogul demonstrated last week with the shock £24bn bid for ARM, the microchip designer whose inventions power the iPhone.
“This is the company I wanted to do for so many years, our most important [deal], my big bet for the future,” he proclaimed.
The agreement appeared ludicrous by some standards. Wrapped up in days, the price –£17 a share – came at an enormous profit multiple. But in the world of Masayoshi Son, it was just another step on his charge to making SoftBank not only the biggest tech company in Japan, but one day, the world.

Automated Manufacturing: "This Is Automation" 1955 General Electric

more at http://scitech.quickfound.net/tech/technology_news.html
Some history of automation, and descriptions of how automation was improving factory productivi...

more at http://scitech.quickfound.net/tech/technology_news.html
Some history of automation, and descriptions of how automation was improving factory productivity in the 1950s.
NEWVERSION with improved video & sound: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2w3G3oMqbNs
Public domain film from the Library of CongressPrelinger Archive, slightly cropped to remove uneven edges, with the aspect ratio corrected, and mild video noise reduction applied.
The soundtrack was also processed with volume normalization, noise reduction, clipping reduction, and/or equalization (the resulting sound, though not perfect, is far less noisy than the original).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Automation
Automation is the use of machines, control systems and information technologies to optimize productivity in the production of goods and delivery of services. The correct incentive for applying automation is to increase productivity, and/or quality beyond that possible with current human labor levels so as to realize economies of scale, and/or realize predictable quality levels. The incorrect application of automation, which occurs most often, is an effort to eliminate or replace human labor. Simply put, whereas correct application of automation can net as much as 3 to 4 times original output with no increase in current human labor costs, incorrect application of automation can only save a fraction of current labor level costs. In the scope of industrialisation, automation is a step beyond mechanisation. Whereas mechanisation provides human operators with machinery to assist them with the muscular requirements of work, automation greatly decreases the need for human sensory and mental requirements while increasing load capacity, speed, and repeatability. Automation plays an increasingly important role in the world economy and in daily experience.
Automation has had a notable impact in a wide range of industries beyond manufacturing (where it began). Once-ubiquitous telephone operators have been replaced largely by automated telephone switchboards and answering machines. Medical processes such as primary screening in electrocardiography or radiography and laboratory analysis of human genes, sera, cells, and tissues are carried out at much greater speed and accuracy by automated systems. Automated teller machines have reduced the need for bank visits to obtain cash and carry out transactions. In general, automation has been responsible for the shift in the world economy from industrial jobs to service jobs in the 20th and 21st centuries.
The term automation, inspired by the earlier word automatic (coming from automaton), was not widely used before 1947, when General Motors established the automation department. At that time automation technologies were electrical, mechanical, hydraulic and pneumatic. Between 1957 and 1964 factory output nearly doubled while the number of blue collar workers started to decline...Reliability and precision
The old focus on using automation simply to increase productivity and reduce costs was seen to be short-sighted, because it is also necessary to provide a skilled workforce who can make repairs and manage the machinery. Moreover, the initial costs of automation were high and often could not be recovered by the time entirely new manufacturing processes replaced the old. (Japan's "robot junkyards" were once world famous in the manufacturing industry.)
Automation is now often applied primarily to increase quality in the manufacturing process, where automation can increase quality substantially. For example, internal combustion engine pistons used to be installed manually. This is rapidly being transitioned to automated machine installation, because the error rate for manual installment was around 1-1.5%, but has been reduced to 0.00001% with automation.
Health and environment
The costs of automation to the environment are different depending on the technology, product or engine automated. There are automated engines that consume more energy resources from the Earth in comparison with previous engines and those that do the opposite too. Hazardous operations, such as oil refining, the manufacturing of industrial chemicals, and all forms of metal working, were always early contenders for automation.
Convertibility and turnaround time
Another major shift in automation is the increased demand for flexibility and convertibility in manufacturing processes. Manufacturers are increasingly demanding the ability to easily switch from manufacturing Product A to manufacturing Product B without having to completely rebuild the production lines...
Digital electronics helped too. Former analogue-based instrumentation was replaced by digital equivalents which can be more accurate and flexible, and offer greater scope for more sophisticated configuration, parametrization and operation...

more at http://scitech.quickfound.net/tech/technology_news.html
Some history of automation, and descriptions of how automation was improving factory productivity in the 1950s.
NEWVERSION with improved video & sound: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2w3G3oMqbNs
Public domain film from the Library of CongressPrelinger Archive, slightly cropped to remove uneven edges, with the aspect ratio corrected, and mild video noise reduction applied.
The soundtrack was also processed with volume normalization, noise reduction, clipping reduction, and/or equalization (the resulting sound, though not perfect, is far less noisy than the original).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Automation
Automation is the use of machines, control systems and information technologies to optimize productivity in the production of goods and delivery of services. The correct incentive for applying automation is to increase productivity, and/or quality beyond that possible with current human labor levels so as to realize economies of scale, and/or realize predictable quality levels. The incorrect application of automation, which occurs most often, is an effort to eliminate or replace human labor. Simply put, whereas correct application of automation can net as much as 3 to 4 times original output with no increase in current human labor costs, incorrect application of automation can only save a fraction of current labor level costs. In the scope of industrialisation, automation is a step beyond mechanisation. Whereas mechanisation provides human operators with machinery to assist them with the muscular requirements of work, automation greatly decreases the need for human sensory and mental requirements while increasing load capacity, speed, and repeatability. Automation plays an increasingly important role in the world economy and in daily experience.
Automation has had a notable impact in a wide range of industries beyond manufacturing (where it began). Once-ubiquitous telephone operators have been replaced largely by automated telephone switchboards and answering machines. Medical processes such as primary screening in electrocardiography or radiography and laboratory analysis of human genes, sera, cells, and tissues are carried out at much greater speed and accuracy by automated systems. Automated teller machines have reduced the need for bank visits to obtain cash and carry out transactions. In general, automation has been responsible for the shift in the world economy from industrial jobs to service jobs in the 20th and 21st centuries.
The term automation, inspired by the earlier word automatic (coming from automaton), was not widely used before 1947, when General Motors established the automation department. At that time automation technologies were electrical, mechanical, hydraulic and pneumatic. Between 1957 and 1964 factory output nearly doubled while the number of blue collar workers started to decline...Reliability and precision
The old focus on using automation simply to increase productivity and reduce costs was seen to be short-sighted, because it is also necessary to provide a skilled workforce who can make repairs and manage the machinery. Moreover, the initial costs of automation were high and often could not be recovered by the time entirely new manufacturing processes replaced the old. (Japan's "robot junkyards" were once world famous in the manufacturing industry.)
Automation is now often applied primarily to increase quality in the manufacturing process, where automation can increase quality substantially. For example, internal combustion engine pistons used to be installed manually. This is rapidly being transitioned to automated machine installation, because the error rate for manual installment was around 1-1.5%, but has been reduced to 0.00001% with automation.
Health and environment
The costs of automation to the environment are different depending on the technology, product or engine automated. There are automated engines that consume more energy resources from the Earth in comparison with previous engines and those that do the opposite too. Hazardous operations, such as oil refining, the manufacturing of industrial chemicals, and all forms of metal working, were always early contenders for automation.
Convertibility and turnaround time
Another major shift in automation is the increased demand for flexibility and convertibility in manufacturing processes. Manufacturers are increasingly demanding the ability to easily switch from manufacturing Product A to manufacturing Product B without having to completely rebuild the production lines...
Digital electronics helped too. Former analogue-based instrumentation was replaced by digital equivalents which can be more accurate and flexible, and offer greater scope for more sophisticated configuration, parametrization and operation...

Building Without Nails The Genius of Japanese Carpentry

We've heard of the genius "technology" used in ancient times to build towering monuments with nothing more than primitive tools like stones and ropes. The Egypt...

We've heard of the genius "technology" used in ancient times to build towering monuments with nothing more than primitive tools like stones and ropes. The Egyptian pyramids of old is a great example.
Back in the far east, Japan had plenty to offer the ancient world as well when it came to resourceful inventions and crafts. TraditionalJapaneseCarpenters built houses, temples, and castles, without the use of nails, screws, or bolts.
In a documentary interviewing one of the few remaining practitioners of this seemingly lost art of carpentry, an old Japanese master craftsman exclaims "No bolts, no nails. It lasts longer!". Proudly claiming its effectiveness that no one would be able to argue against its success in the form of several majestic towering temples all over Japan still standing to this day.
After being subjected to harsh weather and clashes of changes in civilizations for well over a thousand years. But with the bold statement comes a clear understanding that the success to this art isn't because they designed it to withstand "against" nature, instead, it is all about being "with" nature.
Moving his livelihood to New York and sharing his art form of old Japanese wood working to the world, Isao Hanafusa, co-owner of Miya Shoji, has carved himself a unique niche in the competitive market of the furnishing industry.
Sought out and revered by New Yorkers wanting that embrace with nature in their interior decor with a style and durability in craftsmanship that can't be rivaled by most factory produced alternatives.
All furniture selections in Miya Shoji showrooms are hand crafted, even the types lumber used in all his crafts are hand selected by Hanafusa himself. Isao Hanafusa was a graduate of Industrial Revolution studies of which he states has produced countless wonders for the modern world, but its cold machinery has also tragically killed off individual talent that is supposed to reside in craftsmen.
To this day, he rejects criticisms of his methods being unnecessarily old fashioned, because with all the bold talk of technologically advanced tools and methods used in modern day construction work, the Hanafusa family believes a thousand years worth of talent refinement and mastery should not be thrown away in exchange for mass production convenience.
Nor is it going to back down from the contest that their crafts will last even longer than rigid concrete and metal structures for the simple fact they are not designed to resist against the force of mother nature, but to live with her.
Credits: China Uncensored
China Uncensored channel: https://www.youtube.com/user/NTDChinaUncensored

We've heard of the genius "technology" used in ancient times to build towering monuments with nothing more than primitive tools like stones and ropes. The Egyptian pyramids of old is a great example.
Back in the far east, Japan had plenty to offer the ancient world as well when it came to resourceful inventions and crafts. TraditionalJapaneseCarpenters built houses, temples, and castles, without the use of nails, screws, or bolts.
In a documentary interviewing one of the few remaining practitioners of this seemingly lost art of carpentry, an old Japanese master craftsman exclaims "No bolts, no nails. It lasts longer!". Proudly claiming its effectiveness that no one would be able to argue against its success in the form of several majestic towering temples all over Japan still standing to this day.
After being subjected to harsh weather and clashes of changes in civilizations for well over a thousand years. But with the bold statement comes a clear understanding that the success to this art isn't because they designed it to withstand "against" nature, instead, it is all about being "with" nature.
Moving his livelihood to New York and sharing his art form of old Japanese wood working to the world, Isao Hanafusa, co-owner of Miya Shoji, has carved himself a unique niche in the competitive market of the furnishing industry.
Sought out and revered by New Yorkers wanting that embrace with nature in their interior decor with a style and durability in craftsmanship that can't be rivaled by most factory produced alternatives.
All furniture selections in Miya Shoji showrooms are hand crafted, even the types lumber used in all his crafts are hand selected by Hanafusa himself. Isao Hanafusa was a graduate of Industrial Revolution studies of which he states has produced countless wonders for the modern world, but its cold machinery has also tragically killed off individual talent that is supposed to reside in craftsmen.
To this day, he rejects criticisms of his methods being unnecessarily old fashioned, because with all the bold talk of technologically advanced tools and methods used in modern day construction work, the Hanafusa family believes a thousand years worth of talent refinement and mastery should not be thrown away in exchange for mass production convenience.
Nor is it going to back down from the contest that their crafts will last even longer than rigid concrete and metal structures for the simple fact they are not designed to resist against the force of mother nature, but to live with her.
Credits: China Uncensored
China Uncensored channel: https://www.youtube.com/user/NTDChinaUncensored

TechKnow - The farmers growing vegetables with LED lights

In thisTechKnow episode we see how a niche group of commercial farmers in the US is growing pesticide-free produce inside industrial warehouses with the help of...

In thisTechKnow episode we see how a niche group of commercial farmers in the US is growing pesticide-free produce inside industrial warehouses with the help of artificial light.
GreenSenseFarms runs its vertical farm from a 2,800 square metre warehouse just outside Chicago. The farm is bathed in a pink glow - the effect of the thousands of red and blue LEDs - light-emitting diodes - which enable the plants to photosynthesise.
"We take weather out of the equation," explains Robert Colangelo, founder of Green Sense Farms. "We've created groundhog day here. Each day is consistent and it's the same, so we always get perfect plants every day."
Farming in a controlled environment means the plants grow within a certain time using 98 percent less water. At Green Sense Farms it takes about 42 days to grow a head of lettuce, which is from 3 to 17 days faster than it would take if grown in a field. Now, Green Sense is figuring out different red and blue light combinations to optimise growing other plants, such as chives or basil.
We also visit FarmedHere, another indoor farm, which uses an aquaponics growing system: waste from tilapia, a freshwater fish kept in tanks, is broken down by natural bacteria into nitrates, which is then cycled to the leafy greens grown there as fertiliser.
"Nitrates are the most available plant foods on the planet, so the nutrient-rich water from the fish tanks, is moved on to the area of our growth systems where the plants live. The plants take the nutrients, they filter the water, and the water recirculates back to the fish," explains Paul Hardej, cofounder of FarmedHere.
The indoor farm started off using fluorescent lighting, but are making the move to LEDs. It's the first commercial indoor farm to be certified as organic by the US Department of Agriculture.
While indoor farms are a nascent, growing industry, could they ever replace traditional farming? We put that question to some of the agricultural experts who appear in this episode.
We also head to Seattle-Tacoma International Airport to see how conservationists are utilising the surrounding open, vacant land to save wildlife and bees. The CommonAcre, a bee conservation group, has gone into partnership with the airport to develop a strain of stronger bees that can survive the harsh winter.
As Bob Redmond, the executive director of Common Acre tells us, bees are crucial as they "pollinate one third of everything that humans eat". But since 2006, he says, "there's a syndrome mostly affecting commercial beekeepers in which the colonies enter a doom cycle and they can't produce enough bees to survive so those populations collapse."
Near one of the main runways are natural wetlands, which attract birds that can get caught in the engines if they fly too close to the aircraft. We see how the airport's resident wildlife biologist has come up with creative ways to scare the birds away and to trap and relocate them to a green space about 100km from the airport.
Subscribe to our channel: http://bit.ly/AJSubscribe
Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/AJEnglish
Find us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/aljazeera
Check our website: http://www.aljazeera.com/

In thisTechKnow episode we see how a niche group of commercial farmers in the US is growing pesticide-free produce inside industrial warehouses with the help of artificial light.
GreenSenseFarms runs its vertical farm from a 2,800 square metre warehouse just outside Chicago. The farm is bathed in a pink glow - the effect of the thousands of red and blue LEDs - light-emitting diodes - which enable the plants to photosynthesise.
"We take weather out of the equation," explains Robert Colangelo, founder of Green Sense Farms. "We've created groundhog day here. Each day is consistent and it's the same, so we always get perfect plants every day."
Farming in a controlled environment means the plants grow within a certain time using 98 percent less water. At Green Sense Farms it takes about 42 days to grow a head of lettuce, which is from 3 to 17 days faster than it would take if grown in a field. Now, Green Sense is figuring out different red and blue light combinations to optimise growing other plants, such as chives or basil.
We also visit FarmedHere, another indoor farm, which uses an aquaponics growing system: waste from tilapia, a freshwater fish kept in tanks, is broken down by natural bacteria into nitrates, which is then cycled to the leafy greens grown there as fertiliser.
"Nitrates are the most available plant foods on the planet, so the nutrient-rich water from the fish tanks, is moved on to the area of our growth systems where the plants live. The plants take the nutrients, they filter the water, and the water recirculates back to the fish," explains Paul Hardej, cofounder of FarmedHere.
The indoor farm started off using fluorescent lighting, but are making the move to LEDs. It's the first commercial indoor farm to be certified as organic by the US Department of Agriculture.
While indoor farms are a nascent, growing industry, could they ever replace traditional farming? We put that question to some of the agricultural experts who appear in this episode.
We also head to Seattle-Tacoma International Airport to see how conservationists are utilising the surrounding open, vacant land to save wildlife and bees. The CommonAcre, a bee conservation group, has gone into partnership with the airport to develop a strain of stronger bees that can survive the harsh winter.
As Bob Redmond, the executive director of Common Acre tells us, bees are crucial as they "pollinate one third of everything that humans eat". But since 2006, he says, "there's a syndrome mostly affecting commercial beekeepers in which the colonies enter a doom cycle and they can't produce enough bees to survive so those populations collapse."
Near one of the main runways are natural wetlands, which attract birds that can get caught in the engines if they fly too close to the aircraft. We see how the airport's resident wildlife biologist has come up with creative ways to scare the birds away and to trap and relocate them to a green space about 100km from the airport.
Subscribe to our channel: http://bit.ly/AJSubscribe
Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/AJEnglish
Find us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/aljazeera
Check our website: http://www.aljazeera.com/

Japan : The Pacifist War
In the waters of the East China Sea, a daily show of aggression is displayed around the uninhibited Senakaku/Diaoyutai Islands. Coast guards from China and Japan play a dangerous game of cat and mouse as both sides try to lay claim to the disputed resource-rich territory. The concern is - that the two powers are riding towards war.
101 East presenter Steve Chao takes a trip to the disputed Senkaku/Diaoyutai Islands, 200km from Taiwan and 2,000km from Tokyo. This region is home to rich fishing grounds and potential gas deposits.
With China's growing hostility and nuclear missile threats from North Korea, Japan's newly-elected Prime Minister Shinzo Abe vows to strengthen the country's military power to defend the islands at all cost. And that task falls on Japan's Self-Defense Force (SDF), made up of ground, maritime and air units.
During this time of heightened tensions, Japan's Self-Defense Force granted 101 East rare and exclusive access into its operations to showcase the depth of its military prowess. No other media outlets have had this level of openness. We are allowed deep into the inner workings of the force and speak to commanders and soldiers who - for the first time in generations - are preparing to put their lives on the line to protect the country.
Japan's Self-Defense Force was formed in 1954. It is Japan's first defense unit since the country was forced to end its aggressions after World War II. Under government guidelines, the force is meant to be defensive, not offensive, and leaders have so-far prevented labeling it, as a military - although it is increasingly seen as such internationally.
101 East speaks with GeneralShigeru Iwasaki, chief of defence staff, who says the current threats around Japan justifies the SDF.
In order to understand the strength of the force, we went onboard the Hyuga-class carrier. It is a 13,500 tonne contradiction - the constitution forbids the building of an aircraft carrier. Instead it is reclassified as a destroyer class vessel.
We also visited the F15 Squadron at the Naha airbase in Okinawa. It is the closest airbase to the Senkaku/Diaoyutai Islands. In the past year, they scrambled 306 times against foreign incursions.
In January this year, an F15 incepted a Chinese aircraft headed for the islands. Japan's ally, the US have since sounded warnings to China about the intrusions.
On the ground, Japan's elite force, the 1st Airborne Brigade holds wargames and military exercises as a very public demonstration to China. The mission - be prepared to retake the islands if necessary. In a potential armed conflict, the unit is expected to be the first deployed as a rapid reaction force. We speak to the commander and elite paratroopers of the 1st Airborne Brigade and they have very bold answers on how the SDF should be changed, and China's perceived threats.
As Japan begins to reshape, rename and transform what many consider its “military power”, constitutional advisors, like Setsu Kobayashi worry that a change in the hands of its current leaders will restore militarism, going against longheld and cherished ideals of pacifism for which Japan stands for.
Katsumoto Saotome, the director of the Tokyo Air RaidMuseum, is also hesitant of Japan changing its constitution to allow for a full military. The museum, he says, is a reminder of love and peace for the next generation, a place where the Japanese can learn from their past mistakes. The photographs displayed there paint a picture of devastated Tokyo after the US bombing raids in the late 1940s.
Considering its past aggression in World War II, is Japan ready to revive its military might?
More from 101 East on:
YouTube - http://aje.io/101eastYouTube
Facebook - http://facebook.com/101east
Twitter - http://twitter.com/aj101east
Instagram - http://instagram.com/aj101east
Website - http://aljazeera.com/101east

Japan : The Pacifist War
In the waters of the East China Sea, a daily show of aggression is displayed around the uninhibited Senakaku/Diaoyutai Islands. Coast guards from China and Japan play a dangerous game of cat and mouse as both sides try to lay claim to the disputed resource-rich territory. The concern is - that the two powers are riding towards war.
101 East presenter Steve Chao takes a trip to the disputed Senkaku/Diaoyutai Islands, 200km from Taiwan and 2,000km from Tokyo. This region is home to rich fishing grounds and potential gas deposits.
With China's growing hostility and nuclear missile threats from North Korea, Japan's newly-elected Prime Minister Shinzo Abe vows to strengthen the country's military power to defend the islands at all cost. And that task falls on Japan's Self-Defense Force (SDF), made up of ground, maritime and air units.
During this time of heightened tensions, Japan's Self-Defense Force granted 101 East rare and exclusive access into its operations to showcase the depth of its military prowess. No other media outlets have had this level of openness. We are allowed deep into the inner workings of the force and speak to commanders and soldiers who - for the first time in generations - are preparing to put their lives on the line to protect the country.
Japan's Self-Defense Force was formed in 1954. It is Japan's first defense unit since the country was forced to end its aggressions after World War II. Under government guidelines, the force is meant to be defensive, not offensive, and leaders have so-far prevented labeling it, as a military - although it is increasingly seen as such internationally.
101 East speaks with GeneralShigeru Iwasaki, chief of defence staff, who says the current threats around Japan justifies the SDF.
In order to understand the strength of the force, we went onboard the Hyuga-class carrier. It is a 13,500 tonne contradiction - the constitution forbids the building of an aircraft carrier. Instead it is reclassified as a destroyer class vessel.
We also visited the F15 Squadron at the Naha airbase in Okinawa. It is the closest airbase to the Senkaku/Diaoyutai Islands. In the past year, they scrambled 306 times against foreign incursions.
In January this year, an F15 incepted a Chinese aircraft headed for the islands. Japan's ally, the US have since sounded warnings to China about the intrusions.
On the ground, Japan's elite force, the 1st Airborne Brigade holds wargames and military exercises as a very public demonstration to China. The mission - be prepared to retake the islands if necessary. In a potential armed conflict, the unit is expected to be the first deployed as a rapid reaction force. We speak to the commander and elite paratroopers of the 1st Airborne Brigade and they have very bold answers on how the SDF should be changed, and China's perceived threats.
As Japan begins to reshape, rename and transform what many consider its “military power”, constitutional advisors, like Setsu Kobayashi worry that a change in the hands of its current leaders will restore militarism, going against longheld and cherished ideals of pacifism for which Japan stands for.
Katsumoto Saotome, the director of the Tokyo Air RaidMuseum, is also hesitant of Japan changing its constitution to allow for a full military. The museum, he says, is a reminder of love and peace for the next generation, a place where the Japanese can learn from their past mistakes. The photographs displayed there paint a picture of devastated Tokyo after the US bombing raids in the late 1940s.
Considering its past aggression in World War II, is Japan ready to revive its military might?
More from 101 East on:
YouTube - http://aje.io/101eastYouTube
Facebook - http://facebook.com/101east
Twitter - http://twitter.com/aj101east
Instagram - http://instagram.com/aj101east
Website - http://aljazeera.com/101east

Seoul, South Korea's capital, is at the heart of a growing obsession to look perfect.
In theApgujeong district of Seoul, the streets are lined with endless rows of plastic surgery clinics. Business is booming. In South Korea, v-shaped jaws, double eyelids and dimpled smiles are all the rage and people from across the nation, and the world, are flocking to the clinics for plastic surgery, supporting an industry worth $5bn a year.
More than 4,000 clinics provide cosmetic surgery in Seoul, with an estimated 650,000 people a year going under the knife.
But the surgeries performed by some of the clinics do not always live up to patients' expectations and the quest for beauty and profits is putting lives at risk.
So Yi Yoon has suffered many medical problems since having plastic surgery, including not being able to close one of her eyes. She now works two jobs to pay off her debts and is suffering from depression.
On this edition of 101 East, we look at what is driving the growth of this booming business and at what price to individuals and the wider Korean society?
101 East delves into Korea's plastic surgery craze and uncovers the real price of pursuing physical perfection.
More from 101 East on:
YouTube - http://aje.io/101eastYouTube
Facebook - http://facebook.com/101east
Twitter - http://twitter.com/aj101east
Instagram - http://instagram.com/aj101east
Website - http://aljazeera.com/101east

Seoul, South Korea's capital, is at the heart of a growing obsession to look perfect.
In theApgujeong district of Seoul, the streets are lined with endless rows of plastic surgery clinics. Business is booming. In South Korea, v-shaped jaws, double eyelids and dimpled smiles are all the rage and people from across the nation, and the world, are flocking to the clinics for plastic surgery, supporting an industry worth $5bn a year.
More than 4,000 clinics provide cosmetic surgery in Seoul, with an estimated 650,000 people a year going under the knife.
But the surgeries performed by some of the clinics do not always live up to patients' expectations and the quest for beauty and profits is putting lives at risk.
So Yi Yoon has suffered many medical problems since having plastic surgery, including not being able to close one of her eyes. She now works two jobs to pay off her debts and is suffering from depression.
On this edition of 101 East, we look at what is driving the growth of this booming business and at what price to individuals and the wider Korean society?
101 East delves into Korea's plastic surgery craze and uncovers the real price of pursuing physical perfection.
More from 101 East on:
YouTube - http://aje.io/101eastYouTube
Facebook - http://facebook.com/101east
Twitter - http://twitter.com/aj101east
Instagram - http://instagram.com/aj101east
Website - http://aljazeera.com/101east

FINAL FANTASY XIV Documentary Part #1 - "One Point O"

In the first video in our three-part series, we tell the story of how the 1.0 version of FINAL FANTASY 14 came to be. How FINAL FANTASY 11 inspired its design, ...

In the first video in our three-part series, we tell the story of how the 1.0 version of FINAL FANTASY 14 came to be. How FINAL FANTASY 11 inspired its design, the ways in which the game fell short and how Square-Enix and the development team reacted to its failure.
Noclip operates entirely through the funding of its members. To help us tell more stories about video games and the people who make them, please consider becoming a patron: https://www.patreon.com/dannyodwyer
Produced by Danny O'Dwyer & JeremyJayne
@dannyodwyer / @adackmusic
Music supplied by AudioNetwork
- Fractured: https://us.audionetwork.com/browse/m/track/fractured_140052
- Dream House 3: https://us.audionetwork.com/browse/m/track/dream-house-3_18139
- Spheres: https://us.audionetwork.com/browse/m/track/spheres_58238
- Future Perfect: https://us.audionetwork.com/browse/m/track/future-perfect_73029
- Icy Tundra 2: https://us.audionetwork.com/browse/m/track/icy-tundra-2_83525
- Admissions 2: https://us.audionetwork.com/browse/m/track/admissions-2_110841

In the first video in our three-part series, we tell the story of how the 1.0 version of FINAL FANTASY 14 came to be. How FINAL FANTASY 11 inspired its design, the ways in which the game fell short and how Square-Enix and the development team reacted to its failure.
Noclip operates entirely through the funding of its members. To help us tell more stories about video games and the people who make them, please consider becoming a patron: https://www.patreon.com/dannyodwyer
Produced by Danny O'Dwyer & JeremyJayne
@dannyodwyer / @adackmusic
Music supplied by AudioNetwork
- Fractured: https://us.audionetwork.com/browse/m/track/fractured_140052
- Dream House 3: https://us.audionetwork.com/browse/m/track/dream-house-3_18139
- Spheres: https://us.audionetwork.com/browse/m/track/spheres_58238
- Future Perfect: https://us.audionetwork.com/browse/m/track/future-perfect_73029
- Icy Tundra 2: https://us.audionetwork.com/browse/m/track/icy-tundra-2_83525
- Admissions 2: https://us.audionetwork.com/browse/m/track/admissions-2_110841

“Princes of the Yen: CentralBanks and the Transformation of the Economy” reveals how Japanese society was transformed to suit the agenda and desire of powerful interest groups, and how citizens were kept entirely in the dark about this.
Based on a book by ProfessorRichard Werner, a visiting researcher at the Bank of Japan during the 90s crash, during which the stock market dropped by 80% and house prices by up to 84%. The film uncovers the real cause of this extraordinary period in recent Japanese history.
Making extensive use of archival footage and TV appearances of Richard Werner from the time, the viewer is guided to a new understanding of what makes the world tick. And discovers that what happened in Japan almost 25 years ago is again repeating itself in Europe. To understand how, why and by whom, watch this film.
“Princes of the Yen” is an unprecedented challenge to today’s dominant ideological belief system, and the control levers that underpin it. Piece by piece, reality is deconstructed to reveal the world as it is, not as those in power would like us to believe that it is.
“Because only power that is hidden is power that endures.”
A film by MichaelOswald
You can follow Richard Werner (Author of the Book) on Twitter at @ProfessorWerner
Translate this film: http://www.youtube.com/timedtext_video?ref=share&v=p5Ac7ap_MAY
Help us spread the word:
Rate this film on IMDB: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt4172710/
Rate it and comment on youtube.
Share the film with your network.
Reviews:
“Mastery of filmmaking. An engaging and dynamic narrative supported by visual aesthetics” - SimeonRoberts - Film Critic, http://filmgods.co.uk/
"Essential viewing if you've any interest at all in economics or politics" - SteveMorrisseyFilm Reviwer & Critic, http://www.moviesteve.com/review-princes-of-the-yen-2014/
“Blows open the widely held consensus that ‘independent’ central banks are a force for economic good." Josh Ryan-Collins - New Economics Foundation and co-author of “Where DoesMoney Come From?"
"A fascinating look at the need for better public understanding of just how much money can affect the world we live in.” Ben Dyson - Founder Positive Money & co-author of ‘Modernising Money’
Website: http://princesoftheyen.com/
How central banks create money: http://princesoftheyen.com/central-bank-money-creation/

“Princes of the Yen: CentralBanks and the Transformation of the Economy” reveals how Japanese society was transformed to suit the agenda and desire of powerful interest groups, and how citizens were kept entirely in the dark about this.
Based on a book by ProfessorRichard Werner, a visiting researcher at the Bank of Japan during the 90s crash, during which the stock market dropped by 80% and house prices by up to 84%. The film uncovers the real cause of this extraordinary period in recent Japanese history.
Making extensive use of archival footage and TV appearances of Richard Werner from the time, the viewer is guided to a new understanding of what makes the world tick. And discovers that what happened in Japan almost 25 years ago is again repeating itself in Europe. To understand how, why and by whom, watch this film.
“Princes of the Yen” is an unprecedented challenge to today’s dominant ideological belief system, and the control levers that underpin it. Piece by piece, reality is deconstructed to reveal the world as it is, not as those in power would like us to believe that it is.
“Because only power that is hidden is power that endures.”
A film by MichaelOswald
You can follow Richard Werner (Author of the Book) on Twitter at @ProfessorWerner
Translate this film: http://www.youtube.com/timedtext_video?ref=share&v=p5Ac7ap_MAY
Help us spread the word:
Rate this film on IMDB: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt4172710/
Rate it and comment on youtube.
Share the film with your network.
Reviews:
“Mastery of filmmaking. An engaging and dynamic narrative supported by visual aesthetics” - SimeonRoberts - Film Critic, http://filmgods.co.uk/
"Essential viewing if you've any interest at all in economics or politics" - SteveMorrisseyFilm Reviwer & Critic, http://www.moviesteve.com/review-princes-of-the-yen-2014/
“Blows open the widely held consensus that ‘independent’ central banks are a force for economic good." Josh Ryan-Collins - New Economics Foundation and co-author of “Where DoesMoney Come From?"
"A fascinating look at the need for better public understanding of just how much money can affect the world we live in.” Ben Dyson - Founder Positive Money & co-author of ‘Modernising Money’
Website: http://princesoftheyen.com/
How central banks create money: http://princesoftheyen.com/central-bank-money-creation/

350Z Make Over

This neglected 350Z is broken and missing parts, so it's time to give it a Mighty Make Over...TyreValve Caps available here: https://mightycarmods.com/colle...

This neglected 350Z is broken and missing parts, so it's time to give it a Mighty Make Over...TyreValve Caps available here: https://mightycarmods.com/collections/accessories
►MCMShop: http://www.mightycarmods.com/collections/
►MCM Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/mightycarmods
►MCM Forum: http://forums.mightycarmods.com
SONG LIST:
►I will Find You (MOOG)
https://itunes.apple.com/au/album/i-will-find-you-feat-alphamama-single/id699764701
►Everything I was (MOOG)
https://itunes.apple.com/au/album/everything-i-was-feat-mark-agustin-erin-renee-single/id504782562
Support for this video comes from Need for SpeedPayback who awesomely agreed to sponsor this build. The game is out November 10th 2017!
►Watch the Trailer Here:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kc-OcOduEx0
Also something to note around Mighty Car Mods: we are normal guys and are not trained mechanics. We like to make interesting car mods and show you how we've gone about it, but we can't promise that anything we show you will work for your particular car, or that you won't harm yourself, someone else, your car or your warranty doing it. Please be safe, be responsible and unless you know what you're doing, do not fool around with very serious machinery just because you've seen us make it look so easy. Talk to a qualified mechanic if you are in any doubt.

This neglected 350Z is broken and missing parts, so it's time to give it a Mighty Make Over...TyreValve Caps available here: https://mightycarmods.com/collections/accessories
►MCMShop: http://www.mightycarmods.com/collections/
►MCM Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/mightycarmods
►MCM Forum: http://forums.mightycarmods.com
SONG LIST:
►I will Find You (MOOG)
https://itunes.apple.com/au/album/i-will-find-you-feat-alphamama-single/id699764701
►Everything I was (MOOG)
https://itunes.apple.com/au/album/everything-i-was-feat-mark-agustin-erin-renee-single/id504782562
Support for this video comes from Need for SpeedPayback who awesomely agreed to sponsor this build. The game is out November 10th 2017!
►Watch the Trailer Here:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kc-OcOduEx0
Also something to note around Mighty Car Mods: we are normal guys and are not trained mechanics. We like to make interesting car mods and show you how we've gone about it, but we can't promise that anything we show you will work for your particular car, or that you won't harm yourself, someone else, your car or your warranty doing it. Please be safe, be responsible and unless you know what you're doing, do not fool around with very serious machinery just because you've seen us make it look so easy. Talk to a qualified mechanic if you are in any doubt.

100 Million Chinese Lose Their Homes ( NHK documentary)

This NHK documentary deal with the Chinese people, the poor Chinese people of China who are being exiled from major cities. They are being thrown out by a corr...

This NHK documentary deal with the Chinese people, the poor Chinese people of China who are being exiled from major cities. They are being thrown out by a corrupt roofless communist government and order to make room for communist members and those who have big money good and jobs. Remember when you see these kind of documentaries coming out of this communist government the documentary producers or filmmakers are being monitor and are not free to report everything they want. Filmmakers on this documentary has some livery to report, but if things look bad in the documentary can you imagine the stuff that Filmmakers were not able to report on. See documentary and enjoy and I hope you become a subscribe, please pray for the people of China .
TO MAKE YOUR DONATE GIFT:
https://www.paypal.com/us/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_flow&SESSION=P0aUXwQRHbIQ2NPx84rTqNQykAm0ToGoWiFDAMr9mOux5ne71wiqgH_ITOa&dispatch=5885d80a13c0db1f8e263663d3faee8d94717bd303200c3af9aadd01a5f55080
ThanksFollow onTwitter: https://twitter.com/SealSixth
Host:
James J. Tsidkenu
The SixthSealChannel:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCw30...Sixth Seal Christian Ministry is a partner of TV Rapture:
http://tvrapture.com/
Sixth Seal News and Updates
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DbGxH...
Sixth Seal Over DriveMusic
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rOl9q...
Sixth Seal FunnyTalk and Things
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fNy4C...
Sixth Seal Science and Theory
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ljNLh...
Video By:
Sixth Seal Christian Ministry
The Sixth Seal Channel
Sixth Seal Christian Ministry is a partner of TV Rapture. Com

This NHK documentary deal with the Chinese people, the poor Chinese people of China who are being exiled from major cities. They are being thrown out by a corrupt roofless communist government and order to make room for communist members and those who have big money good and jobs. Remember when you see these kind of documentaries coming out of this communist government the documentary producers or filmmakers are being monitor and are not free to report everything they want. Filmmakers on this documentary has some livery to report, but if things look bad in the documentary can you imagine the stuff that Filmmakers were not able to report on. See documentary and enjoy and I hope you become a subscribe, please pray for the people of China .
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